

Ifeoma Onyefulu was born in 1959 in Onitsha, Anambra State, Nigeria, and grew up in an Igbo community rich in tradition and storytelling.
She initially pursued photography and moved to the United Kingdom in the 1980s, where she studied photography at the Orange Coast College, California, before settling in London. Her background in photography became central to her career as an author of children’s picture books about African life.
Onyefulu began her career as a photographer, working for magazines and documenting African life. Inspired to make African culture accessible to children, she began combining her photographs with storytelling, creating books that introduced young readers to Igbo life, African traditions, and everyday experiences.
Her works stand out for their use of real photographs instead of illustrations, making them authentic visual guides to African family, festivals, and community life.
Her books are widely used in schools in the UK, US, and Nigeria to teach diversity and African culture.
Her works stand as a counter-narrative to stereotypical or exoticized views of Africa in Western children’s books.
Ifeoma Onyefulu is a pioneer in using photography to tell children’s stories about Africa. Her books have introduced countless young readers to Nigerian and African culture in relatable, positive, and educational ways.
She is part of the movement of Nigerian women writers — alongside Flora Nwapa, Buchi Emecheta, and Akachi Adimora-Ezeigbo — who broadened the representation of Africa in global literature, though her unique focus is on children’s picture books.
Ifeoma Onyefulu is not just a writer but a cultural educator through pictures and words. With works like A is for Africa, Emeka’s Gift, and Ebele’s Favourite, she has preserved Nigerian traditions for young readers worldwide, ensuring African children see themselves positively represented in literature.






