No One Leaves Clean: Living, Breathing and Surviving the Postcolonial African Economy., Yaw Ofosu-Asare, Set Margins', 2025, 12.5 x 17.5 cm, 600 pages, PB , ISBN: 9789083579580
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No One Leaves Clean is a visceral portrait of Ghana at the turn of the new millennium, where dreams, betrayals, and survival unfold in the shadows of urban life. Set against the raw streets and market circles of Takoradi and Accra, this novel traces the life of a man haunted by deferred aspirations, a wife’s unrelenting desire for wealth, and the relentless weight of a nation caught between hope and disillusionment.

Blending realism with lyrical fragments and magical motifs, No One Leaves Clean captures the ghostly persistence of history in everyday rituals, political betrayals, informal economies, fleeting escapes through music, and the unspoken codes of secrecy, shame, and resilience. It is a story of masculinity undone, family bonds frayed, and identities reshaped in the crucible of Ghana’s postcolonial struggle.

This is a story of brilliant men made invisible, of women who carry history on their heads, of a city that counts bodies but never souls. It is about the specific shame of having once been exceptional, about marriages that have become architecture of silence, about waiting for your turn to disappear. Raw, unflinching, and devastatingly beautiful, No One Leaves Clean announces a vital new voice in African literature, one that transforms the ordinary humiliations of poverty into something approaching the sacred.

No One Leaves Clean asks: what does it mean to live, to dream, and to leave a mark in a country where nothing—and no one—remains untouched?

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