Perfect Little Angels by Vincent Anioke

A beautifully imagined story collection that explores masculinity, repressed desires and love

Image | Perfect Little Angels by Vincent Anioke

(Arsenal Pulp Press)

A beautifully imagined story collection set largely in Nigeria that explores themes of masculinity and repressed desires through the lens of (un)conditional love.
In this stunning debut story collection set largely in Nigeria, questions abound: What happens when we fall short of society's — and our own — expectations? When our personal desires conflict with the duties we are bound to? The characters in Perfect Little Angels confront these dilemmas and more in these brilliantly imagined tales.
In a boarding school, tensions brew between students and vengeful staff. An addict seeks a fresh start in pottery class. A man returns home from university abroad with confessions that unravel his mother's world. Amid winter storms, a ghost delights her grief-stricken partner. And atop a hill surrounded by rot and garbage, two lovers dare to embark on a secret, dangerous romance. Human desires — for connection, salvation and understanding — imbue these deeply Nigerian stories with universal resonance.
In Vincent Anioke's tenderly written stories, characters seek love in different permutations from teachers, parents, dead partners and even God. Perfect Little Angels is a nuanced exploration of masculinity, religion, marginalization, suppressed queerness, and self-expression through the lens of (un)conditional love. (From Arsenal Pulp Press)
Vincent Anioke was born and raised in Nigeria and now lives in Waterloo. Ont. He has been a finalist for the 2023 RBC Bronwen Wallace Award for Emerging Writers and the Commonwealth Story Prize, and won the Austin Clarke Fiction Prize in 2021. His short story Utopia was longisted for the 2023 CBC Short Story Prize. His work has been featured in SmokeLong Quarterly, The Rumpus, The Masters Review and Passages North.