Appointment in Togo: Murder in the Fulbright Program

A Lynne Lewis West Africa Mystery

by Rosemary Yaco

Author of:

Murder in the Peace Corps

Dedicated to the heroes and villains who made my thirteen years in West Africa fascinating and the Togolese and Beninese people who with patience and grace endure the presence in their country of Americans sent by their government.

THE STORY IS FICTITIOUS. THE EVENTS DID NOT HAPPEN, THE PEOPLE DID NOT EXIST. BUT THE AMBIENCE, THE ATMOSPHERE, THE DETAILS OF AFRICAN LIFE AS THEY STRIKE THE AMERICAN INTERLOPER ARE BASED ON THE AUTHOR'S THIRTEEN YEARS IN TOGO AND BENIN FROM 1983-1996

About the Author:

Rosemary Yaco spent her early years in Michigan and earned a Ph. D. in American Culture and won a Hopwood award for poetry at the University of Michigan. In 1983 she joined the Peace Corps and served as educational advisor for English teaching in French speaking Togo, West Africa. She stayed in West Africa for a total of 13 years with three years as a Fulbright Professor at the University of Benin in Togo, then as Director of the English Language Program for the United States Information Agency in Benin for seven years.
She now lives in St. Petersburg, Florida and is working on the third book of the Lynne Lewis West Africa Murder Mystery Series, Cotonou Means Death: Murder in the American Cultural Center.

Copyright @ 1999 Rosemary Yaco