Education
Born in Nawfia-Awka, a village near the Igbo city of Onitsha in Nigeria, Nwankwo attended University College in Ibadan, gaining a Bachelor in 1962.
Born in Nawfia-Awka, a village near the Igbo city of Onitsha in Nigeria, Nwankwo attended University College in Ibadan, gaining a Bachelor in 1962.
After graduating he took a teaching job at Ibadan Grammar School, before going on to write for magazines, including Drum and working for the Nigerian Broadcasting Corporation. He wrote several stories for children that were published in 1963 as Tales Out of School. More Tales out of School would follow in 1965.
Writer of short stories and poems, Nwankwo gained significant attention with his first novel Danda (1964), which was made into a widely performed musical that was entered in the 1966 World Festival of Negro Arts in Dakar, Senegal.
During the Nigerian Civil War Nwanko worked on Biafra"s Arts Council and in 1968, in collaboration with Samuel X. Ifekjika, he wrote Biafra: The Making of a Nation. After the civil war, he returned to Lagos and worked on the national newspaper, the Daily Times.
His subsequent works included the satire My Mercedes Is Bigger than Yours. During the 1970s, Nwankwo earned a Master"s and Doctor of Philosophy at Indiana University.
He also wrote about corruption in Nigeria.
He spent the latter part of his life in the United States and taught at Michigan State University and Tennessee State University. He died in his sleep in Tennessee, from complications from a heart imbalance that he had been battling for some years. The gambler, in: Black Orpheus nr 9
His Mother, in: Nigeria magazine nr 80, March 1964
The man who lost in: Nigeria magazine nr 84, March 1965
Sex has been good to me, (reprint of essays) 2004
Shadow of the Masquerade, (autobiography) Nashville, Tennessee: Niger House Publications 1994, pp.
58–61.
A Song for Fela & Poems.
Nashville, Tennessee: Nigerhouse, 1993. Theatre reviews in: Nigeria Magazine nr 72, March 1962.