In Asare Konadu's A Woman in Her Prime, the disappearance of Yaw Boakye and the communal search for him form a significant strand of village life that Konadu weaves around Pokuwaa's own story. Though it seems a separate incident, the episode carries meaning for the novel's larger concerns.
It portrays communal solidarity. When Yaw Boakye goes missing, the whole community is drawn into the effort to find him. Villagers, hunters and elders join the search, showing how, in the traditional Akan society Konadu depicts, the misfortune of one member becomes the concern of all. The search dramatises the closeness and mutual responsibility of village life, the same communal fabric that surrounds and pressures Pokuwaa.
It reveals the hold of superstition and belief. The reaction to the disappearance exposes how the community interprets misfortune through spiritual and superstitious lenses, invoking the gods, omens and the workings of unseen forces. This reinforces the novel's picture of a society governed by traditional beliefs, the very beliefs Pokuwaa must negotiate in her quest for a child.
It provides realistic social texture. The episode enriches the novel's depiction of everyday village existence, its rhythms of work, gossip, anxiety and cooperation. It grounds Pokuwaa's private drama in a fully realised community rather than an abstract setting.
It parallels Pokuwaa's own searching. Just as the village searches for the missing man, Pokuwaa is engaged in her own long search, for a child and for peace of mind. The two searches echo one another, and the resolution of the communal anxiety mirrors the eventual easing of Pokuwaa's.
Thus the search for Yaw Boakye is not a mere digression but a device that deepens the reader's sense of communal life, the power of tradition and superstition, and the theme of searching that runs through the whole novel.