Ayokunle Falomo’s Autobiomythography of was published yesterday by Alice James Books. This powerhouse of a book—with a powerhouse of a title—centers on the stories we tell ourselves and each other, the mythologies of our families, our struggles, our heritage. Falomo begins the first poem in his book “I was a boy once &/ I did not show the world my teeth…” In the leaps that follow, he is ready to show us now—his grit, his humor, his vulnerabilities, his Nigerian sensibility—in poems that explore colonization and decolonization, the identities thrust upon him and those he chooses. The book is a wild inner-globetrotting which ends with the tender “Thank You Ancestors Who Loved Me.” Interspersed are a series of spectacular “self-portrait” poems like this one:
https://www.usi.edu/sir/ruth-awad-poetry-picks/self-portrait-with-thorn-necklace-and-hummingbird
Congratulations, Ayokunle!
Excellent post. Thank you. The "of" in the title is inspired, like the "of" in David Lehman's "Poems in the Manner Of."
Posted by: Raymond Hopper | September 11, 2024 at 08:34 PM
Thanks, Denise!
Posted by: Susan Aizenberg | September 14, 2024 at 10:03 AM