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Suyi Davies Okungbowa

Suyi Davies Okungbowa

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Male
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Age
36 years
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Suyi Davies Okungbowa (born Osasuyi E. Okungbowa in 1989) is a Nigerian science fiction, fantasy and horror writer. His work is heavily influenced by the histories and cultures of West Africa and Nigeria, and discusses themes of identity, challenging difference and finding home. He is the author of the godpunk urban fantasy novel, David Mogo, Godhunter (Abaddon, July 2019). WIRED's Peter Rubin referred to him as "one of the most promising new voices coterie of African SFF writers."

Early life

Okungbowa was born and raised in Benin City, Edo State in the southern part of Nigeria. His early life orbited around the University of Benin where his parents worked, and he then went on to obtain a Bachelor's in Civil Engineering from the same university between 2006 and 2011. He later moved to Minna, Niger State and then, Lagos. He went on to study at the University of Arizona in Tucson for an MFA in Creative Writing.

Personal life

Okungbowa lives and works in Tucson, Arizona, where he is earning his MFA in Creative Writing. Prior to that, he worked in various fields, from construction engineering to professional services in finance to marketing communications to digital learning in nonprofit. He is married.

David Mogo, Godhunter (Abaddon, 2019)

Suyi Davies Okungbowa's debut novel, David Mogo, Godhunter was released by the Abaddon imprint of Rebellion Publishing in Oxford, UK on July 9, 2019 in the US and two days later in the UK and Europe. The novel follows the titular demigod, who is also a god hunter, as he scours the streets of Okungbowa's native Lagos, Nigeria, in the aftermath of an event called The Falling where thousands of orishas—Yoruba deities—have fallen to the city.

The novel received mixed reception, with venues like WIRED commenting that, "a number of books have been termed 'godpunk,' but Suyi Davies Okungbowa's novel may be the subgenre's platonic deific ideal," while Publisher's Weekly mentioned that "this story is captivating, and readers who enjoy non-Western fantasy, mythpunk, and tales of found family will find it delightful." However, there were critical mentions of the story structure, which was a novel in three parts, almost akin to a collection of novellas (F(r)iction's Giancarlo Riccobon called it "three books for the price of one") and the treatment of some of the minor characters. But overall, the consensus was that the authorial voice was fresh and welcome, especially in a white-dominated sub-genre.

"American urban fantasy, like any established genre, can get predictable," L.E.H Light of BlackNerdProblems said in a lengthy, favourable review. "David Mogo, Godhunter is anything but."

The Nameless Republic trilogy (Orbit, 2021-present)

In January 2020, Orbit Books (a science fiction and fantasy imprint of Hachette Book Group, USA and Little, Brown UK) announced the acquisition of "an incredible new epic fantasy series" from Okungbowa. They referred to The Nameless Republic as "an evocative tale of myth and magic [that] invites readers into a rich and vibrant world inspired by West-African empires." Okungbowa himself commented: "This series is my love letter to all of us who know the magic that makes West-Africa tick–the lore and music, the harmattan and petrichor, the jollof rice and fried plantain." The first of these books, yet unnamed, is slated for a Summer 2021 publication.

Partial Bibliography

Novels

  • David Mogo, Godhunter (2019)

Short stories

  • "The Haunting of 13 Oluwo Street," Fireside Magazine, October 2019
  • "Dune Song," Apex Magazine, May 2019.
  • "The Secret Life Of The Unclaimed," A World of Horror (anthology), ed. Eric J. Guignard (USA: Dark Moon Books, September 2018), reprinted in Nightmare Magazine, 2019
  • "When You Find Such A Thing," PodCastle, November 2017
  • "Our Secrets, In Keys," Fireside Magazine #46, August 2017
  • "Can Anything Good Come," The Dark Magazine Issue 21, February 2017
  • "Of Tarts and New Beginnings," Omenana Issue #8, November 2016
  • "Sleep Papa, Sleep," in Lights Out: Resurrection, ed. Wole Talabi (Lagos, Nigeria: The Naked Convos, October 2016), 39-52
  • "Places," in Mothership Zeta Issue #1, ed. Mur Lafferty, Sunil Patel and Karen Bovenmayer (Georgia, USA: Escape Artists, November 2015) 79-87. Reprinted in StarShipSofa, October 2017

Nonfiction

  • "'Post' for Whom? Examining the Socioeconomics of a Post-Apocalypse," Strange Horizons, July 2019
  • "From The Inside Out: Worldbuilding Through Extrapolation," SFWA Blog, May 2019
  • "The F-Word Is Here to Stay. Deal With It," Ozy. December 2017
  • "This Is What Happens to Us," in Lightspeed People of Colour Destroy Science Fiction, ed. Nalo Hopkinson and Kristine Ong Muslim (US: John Joseph Adams, Lightspeed, June 2016), 419-420
The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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