Series description
The three-part Executive Hallucination Series starts with the the Gods of War set in Liberia and Somalia, continues as the Brains & Nerves, set in Ghana, and concludes as the Wheels of Justice, also in Ghana.
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Gods of War
West Africa has gone mad again. Coups and counter-coups prevail from North to South. Civil wars run like wildfire from East to West. Everywhere is a bloody abattoir. In Liberia, the foolishness is perhaps even more so. In the thick of this madness, a young medical student, seemingly not smart enough to comprehend the extent of the danger, arrives from Ghana. His one motive is the rescue of his twin—and anyone else smart enough to come along. Moving against time itself, bloodthirsty cannibals and the invasion of Libyan-trained rebels, he finds his family, but there is no sister.
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Wheels of Justice
Dr. Alexander J. Cattrall wants no part in the fracas between Ghana’s National Security Agency and a Chief of Staff who has suddenly declared himself President. But he takes extraordinary exception to the abduction of his twin sister. It is now time to settle a 23-year-old score and help the country fulfil its vow to resist oppressors’ rule.
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Brains & Nerves
Ghana’s hard-won reputation as the bedrock of democracy in a subregion gone mad is threatened by a hallucinatory Chief of Staff who holds the ultimate hostage—the President of the Republic of Ghana. The security apparatus is helpless unless they find someone with the requisite experience to infiltrate the heavily guarded Castle, thwart the dreaded 4th Battalion of Infantry, and break out a sick President.
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Books Description
Each book in the series is an average 270 pages, weigh 368 grams and measures 6 x 0.62 x 9 inches. The fast paced series has been described by some readers as unputdownable.
About the Author
JayJay D. Segbefia, born in May 1982, is the author of Inviolable, Eat Not My Wife, and the Executive Hallucination series: Gods of War, Brains & Nerves, and Wheels of Justice and is West Africa’s leading outdoor adventure operative. He runs a lacustrine, mountaineering and outdoor adventure guiding company in Ghana, his home country. He is a Mandela Washington Fellow of the US Government’s YALI Programme and an AGYLE Alumnus, the German government programme that seeks to strengthen African-German dialogue for cross-border economic cooperation.
JayJay trained as a journalist at the Ghana Institute of Journalism, now an Institute of the University of Media, Arts & Communication in Accra. He is an International Business scholar of the University of Ghana. When he isn’t running the jungle, he writes novels like this.