After four years in London, Adaugo Okonkwo returns to Lagos for Detty December, Nigeria's month-long celebration of parties, concerts, and pure chaos. Thinking she is just coming home for the holidays. Instead, she walks into an identity crisis wrapped in Afrobeats and jollof rice. Lagos has changed. Or maybe Ada has. Between power cuts that interrupt everything, traffic that tests her sanity, and a city that refuses to slow down, she is forced to confront an uncomfortable truth: she does not quite belong in London anymore, but she is not sure she fits in Lagos either. Enter Bolatito, a grounded lawyer who takes her to suya spots at midnight instead of exclusive clubs, who sees past her "I Just Got Back" (IJGB) status to the confused woman underneath. Their connection is immediate, intense, and impossibly complicated by the nearly 4,000 miles that will soon separate them. Meanwhile, Lagos society has its own plans for Ada. There is Dare, the flashy entrepreneur who treats romance like a business merger. Obiora, the cultured diaspora businessman who offers first editions, quotes poetry, and accepts rejection with devastating grace. Everything a mother prays for; wealthy and thoughtful, romantic and respectful. As Ada navigates mega-church services that transition seamlessly into all-night parties, reunions with friends who resent her privilege, and the stark inequality visible on every Lagos street, she is forced to ask herself hard questions: What does home actually mean? Can love survive? Is choosing security over happiness the mature choice, or just the cowardly one? Through flooded streets, generator-powered nights, and the relentless energy of a city that demands everything from you, Ada discovers that belonging is not about choosing between two places, it is about having the courage to build the life you want, even when it scares you. Too Detty to Function is a sharp, funny, and deeply honest exploration of modern Nigerian identity, the immigrant experience, and what it means to come home when you have outgrown the person you used to be. It is a love story to a city, to a man, and ultimately, to the complicated, messy business of choosing yourself. Perfect for anyone who has ever felt caught between two worlds, and everyone who has wondered if love is enough to bridge impossible distances