A Journey Through, and on the Sides of the United Nations
By Nthanda Manduwi
A seven-part reckoning with power, purpose, and possibility.
Coming 6th July, 2026
Now Available From Bien Books
Bien Books is proud to publish the Lessons Book Series by Nthanda Manduwi: a Malawian author, systems thinker, entrepreneur, and former UNDP evaluation analyst whose work examines development, institutions, technology, and Africa’s future.
Across seven interconnected volumes, the series asks why decades of evidence, policy, and intervention have not produced the transformation many societies were promised.
For readers interested in development, power, systems, and the future of global cooperation, this is a series to read, question, and discuss.
These books are an invitation to think more carefully, build more honestly, and act with better evidence.
The Books
1. Lessons
Letters to Professionals Starting Out in International Development
Lessons is a practical and reflective entry point for professionals beginning their journey in international development.
Written as a set of letters to those entering the field, the book explores the distance between what young professionals are taught to believe about impact and what they often encounter inside institutions. It examines evidence, bureaucracy, digital transformation, local knowledge, global narratives, and the quiet compromises that shape development work.
Rather than offering a simple career guide, Lessons asks readers to think carefully about what it means to serve, to learn, and to remain honest inside systems that often reward performance more than reflection. It is the most personal book in the series: a beginning, a warning, and an invitation to approach development with humility.
2. Beggars in Suits
A Study in Elite Capture and the Corruption of “Good Intentions”
Beggars in Suits studies elite capture, respectability, and the corruption of good intentions. It asks how development spaces can become stages where the language of service hides gatekeeping, dependency, and power.
The book examines how people and institutions can appear progressive while preserving the systems they claim to change. It looks at the performance of credibility, the politics of proximity to power, and the ways crisis can become professionally useful to those who claim to solve it.
At its core, Beggars in Suits is about the uncomfortable gap between intention and incentive. It challenges readers to look beyond polished language and ask who benefits when suffering becomes a career, a brand, or a funding model.
3. Systemic Nonsense
Untangling the Logic Behind a World That Runs on Illogic
Systemic Nonsense untangles the logic behind institutions that appear irrational but continue to function exactly as designed. It studies bureaucracy, circular incentives, consultation theatre, meaningless metrics, and the strange comfort systems find in their own confusion.
The book asks why so much professional work produces activity without accountability, reports without learning, and meetings without movement. Rather than treating dysfunction as accidental, it examines how nonsense becomes embedded, rewarded, and defended.
Systemic Nonsense is about learning to recognise institutional illogic when it has been made to look normal. It gives language to the absurdities many professionals experience but are often trained not to name.
4. Impossible Economies
A Front-Row Seat to How Big Governments Have Failed Small Nations Throughout History
Impossible Economies examines how small nations are asked to succeed inside economic arrangements they did not design. It studies the historical burden of colonial trade, aid dependency, policy prescriptions, and the myth that every country is competing on equal terms.
The book looks at how large governments, powerful institutions, and global economic rules have shaped the choices available to smaller nations throughout history. It asks what development means when countries are expected to perform resilience under conditions produced by extraction, constraint, and unequal bargaining power.
Impossible Economies is not a rejection of reform; it is a challenge to shallow explanations of failure. It argues that some economies are called impossible because the world keeps refusing to admit what made them so.
5. So Wrong for So Long
So Wrong for So Long studies why bad ideas survive after evidence has arrived. It asks how institutions learn to manage failure instead of correcting it, and why systems can continue defending approaches that no longer hold up under scrutiny.
The book examines the comfort of familiar frameworks, the politics of admitting error, and the role good people play in sustaining systems they know are not working. It is about policy memory, institutional ego, professional incentives, and the quiet ways failure is explained away.
So Wrong for So Long does not simply ask why systems fail. It asks why failure becomes acceptable, why correction becomes threatening, and why being wrong can become easier than changing course.
6. We Are Still at War
Inside the Quiet Wars Big Powers Still Wage—Without Armies
We Are Still at War examines the quiet wars powerful countries continue to wage without armies. It looks at power through rules, money, infrastructure, data, borders, narratives, and institutional control.
The book argues that domination has not disappeared; it has often become more technical, more polite, and harder to name. Instead of focusing only on open conflict, it studies the ways countries are pressured, constrained, disciplined, and shaped through systems that appear neutral.
We Are Still at War asks readers to reconsider what conflict looks like in a world governed by finance, technology, supply chains, policy regimes, and information flows. It is a study of modern power after empire has changed its clothes.
7. A New Normal
A Future-Minded Reflection on Systems Rebirth
A New Normal brings the series into World 2.0: a world of smarter machines, faster evidence, and the same human egos. It asks what works, in what context, under what circumstances, and why.
The book gathers the questions raised across the series and turns toward the future: not with easy optimism, but with disciplined imagination. It examines what kind of systems might be possible if institutions learned with humility, designed around context, and stopped confusing technological progress with moral progress.
A New Normal is the closing argument of the series. It invites readers to move beyond critique and ask what it would take to build institutions capable of learning, adapting, and telling the truth.
Subscribe to The Lessons Conversation to follow the discussions shaping the next edition and receive one complimentary book each week during the Founder’s Edition release.

Delve into Business and International Development with Nthanda Manduwi
Your First [Free] Book Is Here!
Welcome to a new chapter of The Lessons Conversation.
I am most delighted to finally share the first book in the Lessons series with you, FOR FREE.
If you’ve been following the podcast for a while, thank you for staying on this journey with me. And if you just recently joined us, welcome – I am genuinely glad you’re here.
You may have noticed that this week’s post arrived a day later than usual. Typically, I publish the podcast first thing on Mondays, to start the week with you.
I spent yesterday travelling to New York City for the 2026 United Nations High-Level Political Forum [HLPF], where I’ll be spending the week listening, learning, and engaging in conversations about sustainable development from around the world. Thank you for your patience.
Last week, I had hoped to make the first book available immediately, but I ran into an unexpected challenge with Amazon. Kindle promotions aren’t quite as straightforward, and it took a little longer than expected to make everything work. The good news is that we’ve figured it out.
From this week onward, every week you’ll receive one book from the series completely free.
Rather than following a strict sequence, I’ll simply share whichever book feels most relevant or inspired by the conversations, ideas, and experiences of that particular week. Today that is Lessons. Other weeks it may be Systemic Nonsense, Impossible Economies, or another title entirely. I want each week’s reading to feel like part of an ongoing conversation rather than a reading list.
One important thing to know: once you claim a Kindle book during its free promotion, it remains in your Kindle library permanently. Even though each giveaway lasts only a limited time [5 days to be specific], the copy you download is yours to keep forever.
If you find a book meaningful, I have one small favour to ask: please share it. Send this newsletter to a friend, colleague, student, policymaker, or anyone else you think would enjoy joining the conversation. The goal has never simply been to publish books. It is to build a community that thinks deeply about what works, in what context, under what circumstances, and why.
This Week’s Book
📖 Lessons [Book 1]
The opening book in the series introduces the central question that connects every book that follows:
What Works? In What Context? Under What Circumstances? Why?
Drawing on experiences across international development, entrepreneurship, technology, government, and systems thinking, Lessons explores why good intentions alone are never enough – and why better questions often matter more than quick answers.
How to Read
To receive your free Kindle copy:
* Click the Amazon link below.
* Select the Kindle edition while the promotion is active.
* Add it to your Kindle library.
You do not need a Kindle device. The free Kindle app works on iPhone, Android, tablets, Macs, and PCs, allowing you to build your digital library wherever you read.
Helpful Links
📚 Read this week’s book for free [search on Amazon or in Kindle for the book that is free for the week, and feel free to purchase the others]:http://amazon.com/dp/B0FQNJ61SB
📰 Subscribe to The Lessons Conversation:
Africa paperback pre-orders:https://forms.office.com/r/RMRMKTNd1M
A Small Update on the Podcast
Over the past months, The Lessons Conversation has largely taken the form of Lessons Weekly: my personal reflections on current events, systems, and international development.
For the next seven weeks, the podcast will take a slightly different form.
Each week I’ll dedicate an episode to one of the books in the Lessons series. For the first time, these episodes will also be available as full-length videos on YouTube, so you’ll be able to either listen through your favourite podcast app or watch the conversations as they unfold.
These videos are something I’ve wanted to create for a while – not simply to introduce the books, but to build a lasting body of work around the ideas behind them.
Once we’ve completed this seven-week series, The Lessons Conversation will evolve again. We’ll move beyond solo reflections into conversations with remarkable people whose work is shaping the future of development, technology, entrepreneurship, public policy, and society.
I’m excited for what comes next.
As I spend this week at the High-Level Political Forum here in New York, I’m already finding myself inspired by the conversations taking place. I’m curious to see which ideas stay with me; and, perhaps more importantly, which book feels like the right one to share with you next week.
Thank you for reading, thank you for subscribing, and thank you for being part of this community.
Enjoyed listening to the Lessons Conversation? This post is public, so feel free to share it.
This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit podcast.lessonsconversation.com

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Explore the Series
📖 Read More About the Books
📥 Download Sample Chapters
🎤 Book Nthanda to Speak
📚 Partner with Bien Books
🛒 Pre-Order the Series
Read Nthanda’s Published Books:
If you’d like to go deeper into Nthanda’s journey — from Malawi, through the United Nations to Microsoft, you can find it in her books: