Teju Cole's Every Day Is for the Thief
 opens as it means to go on, with a jeremiad against the corruption and 
sense of hopelessness in which Nigerian society wallows and which it 
seems incapable of escaping. The unnamed narrator has to pay a bribe, 
right under a sign that says, "don't give bribes", as he applies for a 
visa in the Nigerian consulate in New York. The bribe-givers know they 
shouldn't give bribes, the bribe-takers know they shouldn't take them, 
but both are helpless, it seems, against an almost metaphysical force 
that drives them on this path, with no end in sight. At the embassy a 
man says over and over, as if trying to convince himself, "This should 
be a time of joy. You know. Going home should be a thing of joy."