Scientist & Scribe
As a Basic Science teacher, I deconstruct the natural world to ignite curiosity. I don't deliver facts — I engineer the conditions for questions.
As a screenwriter, I apply scientific precision to story — building worlds where every beat is an experiment in emotion.
Emordi Emeka James is a Nigerian writer and screenwriter based in Abuja, Nigeria. His work explores the emotional complexities of human relationships, identity, and societal expectations — blending psychological insight with vivid imagery and sharp social commentary.
As a writer, his stories and poems have been published on Medium, including Papa Joseph, Mr. Purple, and Waist Beads Can't Say Please. Through fiction and poetry, he examines themes of power, vulnerability, and resilience in contemporary life.
As a screenwriter, he has written four produced short films, including One Night, Maybe. — a cinematic study of vulnerability and the rare safety found in the company of a kind stranger. His screenplays sit firmly at the intersection of emotional truth and narrative precision.
Emordi is passionate about storytelling as a tool for reflection, empathy, and social awareness — whether that story is told on a page or on a screen.
Emeka has a rare gift — he makes abstract scientific ideas feel alive and relevant. His students don't just memorise facts; they learn to ask questions. That's the hallmark of an exceptional teacher.
My daughter used to dread science. After just one term with Mr. Emeka, she was coming home excited, explaining ecosystems at the dinner table. He didn't just teach her — he made her fall in love with learning.
What sets Emeka apart is how effortlessly he connects with children. He speaks their language — not by dumbing things down, but by meeting them where they are. I've watched him take the most complex topic and break it into something a ten-year-old not only understands but remembers weeks later.
At JSS Kubwa One, Phase IV, I taught Basic Science to JSS1 students — turning abstract concepts into hands-on discoveries. Activity-based methods put curiosity at the centre of every lesson, and students left each class with more questions than they arrived with.
At Jewel Model Primary School, I broadened my scope — teaching a variety of subjects to Basic Three pupils, adapting my approach to younger learners who needed both structure and wonder in equal measure.
Across both schools, my approach has been consistent: evaluate rigorously, engage creatively, and never let a struggling student fall through the cracks. Discipline isn't imposed — it's cultivated through relevance.
A cinematic study on vulnerability and rare safety found in the company of a kind stranger.
When tragedy strikes and an old flame reappears, one woman must choose between desire and devotion — while her husband fights to survive.
Two former lovers. A confrontation long overdue. As accusations fly and buried truths surface, the line between love and resentment begins to blur.
Caught between loyalty and temptation, one partner walks a dangerous line — until the truth refuses to stay hidden.
When the help outshines the madam, the home becomes a battleground. Some rivalries were never supposed to exist under the same roof.
A young woman. A life pulling in every direction. Abigael has answers for everyone — except herself.
Psychological Thriller · Dark Fiction
Themes: Obsession, predation, urban darkness, psychological tension
A taut psychological thriller about obsession, predation, and the dark places a city hides in plain sight.
Literary Fiction · Psychological Drama · Social Realism
Themes: Authority, religion, fear, family dynamics, emotional survival
A haunting portrait of faith and authority. Through memory and reflection, a household ruled by a towering patriarch reveals how love can be distorted by power — and how children learn to survive inside silence.
Psychological Fiction · Character Study
Themes: Identity, perception, loneliness, societal judgment
A psychological character study of identity and the masks people wear to survive a judgmental world. Dark, introspective, and darkly funny — one nickname, one destiny.
Social Realism · Feminist Fiction · Contemporary Fiction
Themes: Consent, objectification, gender dynamics, bodily autonomy
A bold, socially conscious narrative confronting the objectification of women. It challenges everything society assumes about bodies, desire, and what respect actually looks like.
Literary Fiction · Relationship Drama
Themes: Love under pressure, survival, crisis, emotional endurance
Love placed in the middle of disaster — both literal and emotional. A meditation on endurance, loyalty, and whether survival is physical, emotional, or something else entirely.
Dark Satire · Psychological Fiction
Themes: Consequences, guilt, responsibility, impulsive decisions
Darkly satirical and emotionally charged. A story about impulsive decisions, misplaced trust, and the psychological weight of choices that cannot be undone.
Literary Fiction · Meta-Narrative · Creative Nonfiction
Themes: Storytelling, memory, truth, self-reflection
A reflective, almost meta-narrative piece dissecting the nature of storytelling itself. How personal experience becomes narrative — and how truth shifts depending on who is telling it.
Contemporary Poetry · Reflective Poetry
Themes: Loneliness, resilience, unnoticed suffering, emotional fatigue
The lamppost as quiet suffering. A poem about loneliness, emotional exhaustion, and the invisible burdens carried by those who keep shining for everyone else.
Contemporary Poetry · Emotional Realism
Themes: Separation, endings, memory, unresolved emotions
The raw, unromantic reality of separation. Through movement and vivid imagery, this poem captures the awkward silence and lingering memories of departures that are never graceful.