FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Bien Books Announces the Publication of the Lessons Series by Nthanda Manduwi
Seven-volume collection examining international development, institutions, entrepreneurship, technology, and systems change through the lens of evaluation, evidence, and lived experience.
Detroit, Michigan | 6 July 2026 — Bien Books today announced the publication of the Lessons Book Series, a seven-volume collection by Malawian author and systems entrepreneur Nthanda Manduwi. The series brings together more than a decade of observations drawn from public service, entrepreneurship, international development, and technology, offering an interdisciplinary examination of why institutions, economies, and societies produce the outcomes they do.
Written over a four-year period, the series traces a progression of inquiry rather than presenting a single thesis. Beginning with practical reflections for professionals entering international development, the books expand into broader questions concerning power, institutional incentives, governance, economic development, conflict, and the future design of public systems.
The seven volumes are:
- Lessons – Letters to Professionals Starting Out in International Development
- Beggars in Suits – A Study in Elite Capture and the Corruption of “Good Intentions”
- Systemic Nonsense – Untangling the Logic Behind a World That Runs on Illogic
- Impossible Economies – A Front-Row Seat to How Big Governments Have Failed Small Nations Throughout History
- So Wrong for So Long – An Inquiry into How Bad Ideas Survive Good People Despite Evidence
- We Are Still at War – Inside the Global War Big Powers Still Wage Without Armies
- A New Normal – What Works? In What Context? Under What Circumstances? Why?
Unlike conventional publishing projects, the Lessons series has been released as a Founder’s Edition. Rather than representing the final version of the work, these volumes mark the beginning of a longer programme of public inquiry. Through The Lessons Conversation podcast, the author will engage scholars, policymakers, entrepreneurs, practitioners, technologists, and readers in discussions that challenge, strengthen, and expand the ideas presented throughout the series. These conversations will inform a future revised edition.
“The books were never intended to end a conversation,” said Manduwi. “I wrote them to begin one.”
Manduwi’s work draws on experience across government, entrepreneurship, international development, and technology. She has worked with the Government of Malawi, the United Nations Development Programme Independent Evaluation Office, the World Bank, Microsoft, and a range of public and private institutions. Her work increasingly focuses on systems entrepreneurship, institutional learning, and the application of technology to complex societal challenges.
To encourage broad participation in the conversation, one book from the series will be made available free of charge each week through The Lessons Conversation newsletter, allowing readers to engage with the work as it is discussed publicly.
The Lessons series is available worldwide in eBook, paperback, and hardcover editions through Amazon and other major online retailers.
About the Author
Nthanda Manduwi is a Malawian systems entrepreneur, author, and former international civil servant whose work examines the intersection of international development, technology, entrepreneurship, and institutional change. Her career has spanned government, multilateral organizations, and the private sector, including roles with the United Nations Development Programme Independent Evaluation Office, the World Bank, and Microsoft.
She is the founder of Q2 Systems, a technology company focused on building intelligent systems for agriculture, infrastructure, and industry, and the founder of The Lessons Conversation, a platform dedicated to exploring what works, in what context, under what circumstances, and why. Prior to this week, she founded Bien Corpation, Ntha Foundation and the Kwathu Kollective.
Manduwi holds a Master of Science in Entrepreneurship, a Master of Business Administration [STEM Designated], and A dual-bachelor’s degree in Economics and Demography, . Her research and writing draw on more than a decade of experience working across Africa and the United States, with a particular interest in systems thinking, institutional learning, and the future of public problem-solving.
Lessons is her first major nonfiction series and is being released as a Founder’s Edition that will evolve through ongoing public dialogue, research, and expert interviews.
About Bien Books
Bien Books is a publishing imprint dedicated to publishing thoughtful nonfiction that advances public understanding, institutional learning, and systems thinking. The imprint works with authors whose ideas contribute meaningfully to conversations across policy, entrepreneurship, technology, leadership, and society.
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Bien Books
Website: www.bienbooks.com
Email: publishing@bienbooks.com
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
Today is my home countryMalawi’s 62nd Independence Day.
I desperately wish to say, “Happy Independence Day, Malawi,” but each Independence Day, I find myself carrying the weight of history, reflecting on how far we have come, where we are today, and where we go from here.
I think about the histories that brought us to this very moment. I think about a country that has no history of war: a country that has been the subject of countless development reports, strategies, interventions, and well-intentioned efforts, and yet still finds itself among the poorest nations in the world.
Over the past four years, while working with the United Nations at Headquarters and pursuing my Master’s degrees, I have attempted to make sense of these contradictions.
Today, I am excited to share with you Lessons, a seven-part book series that brings together a decade of [my and other scholars’] observations from Africa, the United Nations, entrepreneurship, technology, and global development.
Over the past two years, I challenged myself to write differently. Every few months, I immersed myself in a new question, spending countless hours reading, listening, researching, interviewing, reflecting, and writing. One book became two, then three, until eventually the project grew into a seven-part series. Each volume represents my best attempt, at that point in time, to make sense of some of the biggest questions I have encountered across development, entrepreneurship, technology, and public policy.
Across the series, I explore failure, institutions, power, broken systems, impossible economies, long wars, and the futures we still have to build. These books are my attempt to understand the world as it is, and perhaps explain why outcomes so often diverge from intentions. They are also my attempt to suggest where we [can] go from here.
At the same time, I am deeply aware that no single person can fully explain systems as complex as the ones these books explore. The ideas presented here are therefore not intended to be the final word. Rather, they are an invitation to begin a much larger conversation. Over the coming year, I will continue speaking with leaders, researchers, entrepreneurs, policymakers, practitioners, and readers from around the world, using those conversations to challenge, strengthen, expand, and, where necessary, revise the arguments presented throughout the series.
For that reason, the books being released today are the Founder’s Edition of the Lessons series. They represent the beginning of the project. Every conversation, every critique, every disagreement, every correction, and every new piece of evidence shared over the coming year will help shape the definitive edition of the series, planned for release in 2027. My hope is that these books become not simply something to read, but the beginning of a conversation we build together.
Perhaps that is what this project has always been about: it was always about engaging in better conversations.
In many ways, this series marks the end of one chapter. It reflects on my lessons gathered over the first decade of my career working across development, public service, and international institutions.
It also marks the beginning of another: as I commit the foreseeable future to entrepreneurship, and building meaningful technologies for the people who need them the most.
From today through the end of my participation in the Big Bets Fellowship with the Rockefeller Foundation in August, I will be gifting you one book for free, each week. I will rely deeply on your insights, as we work collaboratively towards World 2.0.
To receive the first book and instructions on how to access the other six, subscribe to The Lessons Conversation via podcast.lessonsconversation.com. If you are already subscribed, please feel free to subscribe with a second email address, to get the separate email with the instructions. Details will be delivered directly to your inbox once you do.
Happy reading. 🩵🤍
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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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