In this tell-all memoir, W Kpangbala Sengbe beautifully writes events of his life, ranging from ancestral history that meanders multiple regions in the West African rainforest to his embryonic stage in the journey of life in a lowly placed family in societal structural arrangements. Not only is this masterpiece written to the glory of the God of his creation; it also tells the natural story of a man who is hungry to tell the world about the process of making it, though being dealt a very "challenging hand" to mitigate between abject poverty, academic illiteracy, and societal misplacement of a false narrative on his ancestors.
The theme of the memoir is to encourage everyone--regardless of stature and race, gender and nationality, creed and skin color, wealth and societal position, and age--that with the guidance of God and a determined mind, the world is ready and available to conquer.
The proverbial "pulling yourself by the bootstraps" can be of significance when an individual has had a pair of boots to wear. However, when an induvial does not have a pair of boots, how can he pull himself up by the proverbial bootstraps?
Reading I Arrived Later, So What? I Am Also Here will help encourage the young man, the young woman, the middle-aged person, the educated bureaucrat, and the poverty-stricken person in the jungle of Africa or in the inner cities of the United States to understand that sheer determination does not make the success of a person. Blending determination with the goodwill of the God of a person's creation can take an unknown person to reach the panicle of his/her height in life.
Let's read and digest this masterpiece together. In this memoir is the story that will give you a gleamer of hope as you read on...