Brief Summary
Watts up magazine is East Africa’s newest and only communication tool for the energy industry; a thought-leading, energy lifestyle magazine, developed to help the industry answer some of the critical questions it is currently grappling with.
It is a bimonthly Magazine with topics covered as such renewables, waste-to-energy, future fuels, electric vehicles, smart energy, energy efficiency, new technology, energy security and more. We target to engage consumers by breaking down energy issues into simple to understand stories thus making a topic perceived to be relatively complex and boring interesting and actionable.
• The Magazine highlights what organizations are doing across board to ease on matters impacting the communities.
• We cover the wholes spectrum of Oil and Gas, upstream and downstream, from energy generation, source, transmission, distribution and retail in renewables, wind, solar, storage, hydro, gas and smart energy.
• The magazine offers you a chance to speak to your core customers in a language they understand and take action.
Ann Ngugi –
I have read many books but non has captivated me like the Midnight Sun. God bless the writer.
Vivian Sharon –
“If your baby is raised by you alone how will you convince her that marriage is good, what marriage advice will give you her when she will be of your age? your so-learned generation is a great threat to marriage and the subsequent generations,” Ajuma was furiously dogged to drive her point home.
The Midnight Sun is a beautifully woven story about two young Teso lovers-Ejakait and Nasirumbi. They meet when they’re both in college, but their love is soon tested and they break up at a time when Nasirumbi need Ejakait most.
The story is so rich in Iteso culture. I literally felt like I was drinking Akipi from Teso land. The author brings out heated issues surrounding girl child education, single motherhood, feminism and marriage.
What does an educated, single mother in a deeply rooted traditional culture got to do? Agree to marry anyone because it is shameful to have a child and stay unmarried? Leave her child to her parents because the man intending to marry her is doing her a favor and doesn’t want the burden of bringing up a child he didn’t sire?
The role of education in marriage is also greatly contested in the book. At some point I felt angry at the author’s perspective, carefully placed in dialogues. I won’t tell you why. But you can get a copy and make your own judgement.