Background
Nduka was born in Onitsha, Nigeria to an Anglican clergyman and educationist.
Nduka was born in Onitsha, Nigeria to an Anglican clergyman and educationist.
He attended several mission schools as a result of his parents" vocation as church ministers who were often transferred to various stations. Nduka attended Bishop Crowther Seminary, Awka. In 2006, he gained admission into the University of Nigeria to study Music and graduated magna cum laude in 2010.
Thereafter, he proceeded to Kingston University London, United Kingdom where he studied as a postgraduate student in music with research interest in Popular music, Music semiology, Songwriting and Comparative musicology.
As a child who spent most of his time in the vicarage and church premises, he joined The Boys Brigade, an organization founded in Glasgow, Scotland by Sir William Alexander Smith. Afterwards, he became a choir boy singing soprano and later, tenor. Academic and Literary Nduka works in Nigeria as an Assistant Lecturer in Alvan Ikoku Federal College of Education(now Alvan Ikoku Federal University of Education), Owerri.
In addition, he has worked as a freelance writer and columnist for The Nigerian Telegraph.
He is one of the contributors on African Hadithi, a Pan-African online media platform where his essays and poetry have been published. His essay titled Preserving the Igbo Cultural Dogmas via Literature: From Chinua Achebe to Onyeka Nwelue garnered enormous readership and debates.
An emerging voice in literary criticism, Nduka"s published critical reviews and appraisals are centered on contemporary African literature with emphasis on poetry and fiction by authors of African descent. 2015: We Wear Purple Robes ( film) 2016: Listen ( film).