Join the Kingdom
The Legend
Belongs to All of Us
The story of Obokhuai was kept alive by a community — passed from mouth to mouth, from generation to generation. Now the book is written, and the community continues. Join us.
Talk About the Book
Questions Worth Arguing About
These are the questions readers are debating. Drop your answers on our Facebook page or in your book club.
QUESTION 01
Can You Escape Your Destiny?
The Azama clan spent generations trying to prevent the prophecy of the two boats from coming true — refusing fish, avoiding rivers, cancelling a wedding. In the end, destiny found them anyway. Do you believe a person's fate is fixed? Or can choices change it?
Answer on Facebook →QUESTION 02
Was the Wedding Cancellation Right?
A generalissimo cancelled his own wedding because his bride's great-grandfather was a fisherman — a man she had never met. Was that decision fair? Would you have done the same?
Share your view →QUESTION 03
Why Did Izemuze Go to Otuo?
Izemuze had no obligation to the Otuo kingdom. He turned the hunters away the first time. What changed his mind? Was it duty, destiny, or something deeper?
Discuss this →QUESTION 04
Obokhuai or Izemuze — Who is the Real Hero?
The book is named after the battle Izemuze won. But Obokhuai is the legend the book opens with. Who do you believe the story truly belongs to?
Vote on Facebook →QUESTION 05
The Twin Sister's Choice
Ikpaboh disguised herself as her ailing twin brother and led an entire army to victory — without anyone knowing. Was this brave, reckless, or both? What does her action say about loyalty?
Weigh in →QUESTION 06
What Does "The Two Boats" Really Mean?
The prophecy speaks of two boats — but what are they truly a symbol of? Generations and succession? Father and son? The individual versus destiny? What is your interpretation?
Interpret it →⚔ Community Poll · Prophecy Edition
If the Prophecy Was Spoken Over Your Family…
"A small boat shall be made from a big boat. The destiny of one separates them from being one. The two boats shall be destroyed — utterly destroyed."
What would you do?
Share your answer on our Facebook page and see what others chose.