Tomi Adeyemi
Tomi Adeyemi (born August 1, 1993) is a Nigerian-American author of young adult fantasy novels, most notably the Legacy of Orïsha trilogy inspired by Yoruba mythology and centered on themes of magic, oppression, and resistance in the fictional kingdom of Orïsha.[1][2]
Her debut novel, Children of Blood and Bone (2018), became a #1 New York Times bestseller shortly after publication, launching the series with a narrative following protagonist Zélie Adebola's quest to restore divine magic suppressed by a tyrannical regime.[3] The trilogy continued with Children of Virtue and Vengeance (2019) and concluded with Children of Anguish and Anarchy (2024), the latter arriving after multiple announced delays and rewrites that drew fan scrutiny for extending the wait beyond initial expectations.[2][4]
Adeyemi's work has garnered significant commercial success, with millions of copies sold globally, recognition as a three-time New York Times bestseller, and inclusion in TIME magazine's 100 Most Influential People list; the series is also in development for film adaptation by Paramount Pictures, with Adeyemi penning the screenplay.[5][6] Nominated for prestigious genre awards including the Hugo (Lodestar) and Nebula, her debut drew acclaim for blending West African cultural elements with epic fantasy tropes, though some critiques noted reliance on familiar structures over innovative worldbuilding.[7][8]
Early in her career, Adeyemi faced public backlash for accusing veteran author Nora Roberts of plagiarizing the title and cover design of Of Blood and Bone (2018) via Twitter, a claim she retracted after discovering Roberts' established series and long publishing history, highlighting tensions in how emerging authors navigate social media accusations.[9][10] A Harvard University English graduate raised by Yoruba immigrant parents in Illinois, Adeyemi has also pursued acting, modeling, and creative writing coaching alongside her literary pursuits.[11][5]
Early life and education
Family and upbringing
Tomi Adeyemi was born to parents who immigrated from Nigeria and raised her as the middle child of three siblings in suburban Chicago. Her father practices as a doctor, while her mother operates a group of hospices outside the city.[12] The family's Nigerian heritage manifested in a home environment steeped in Yoruba cultural knowledge, including oral traditions about divine spirits known as Orishas, which her parents shared as part of everyday storytelling.[13] This emphasis on cultural transmission coexisted with high parental expectations for education and self-reliance, common among first-generation immigrant households seeking stability in the United States.[13] Despite these roots, Adeyemi's parents refrained from teaching her or her siblings Yoruba, the dialect they spoke fluently, opting instead to use it as a private "secret language" for adult conversations to prevent the children from understanding.[14] This practice underscored a deliberate boundary between generational experiences, fostering in Adeyemi an early sense of detachment from full linguistic immersion in her heritage.[14] The resulting cultural duality—Nigerian identity reinforced within the family unit against the backdrop of an American suburban milieu—contributed to her formative awareness of intersecting influences on personal identity, with home life prioritizing heritage preservation amid broader assimilation pressures.[13] Her parents' Yoruba dialect indirectly shaped her later creative linguistic experiments, as she drew from its phonetic elements in crafting fictional incantations.[15]Academic background
Adeyemi attended Hinsdale Central High School in Hinsdale, Illinois, graduating in 2011. Throughout her teenage years, she persisted in writing despite frustrations with assigned readings, such as initially disliking Arthur Miller's Death of a Salesman during high school English classes, which she later appreciated in college.[16] She enrolled at Harvard University in 2011, initially planning to attend medical school while having written stories since age five. Adeyemi graduated in 2015 with a Bachelor of Arts degree with honors in English literature.[13] [17] [5] During her time at Harvard, Adeyemi immersed herself in the campus creative writing scene, gaining early admission to the Harvard Lampoon as a freshman and participating in Harvardwood's screenwriting programs. However, she encountered institutional resistance to her interests, as a creative writing professor repeatedly denied her entry into fiction workshops over five semesters, citing her fantasy genre submissions as unteachable and not aligned with literary standards, according to her self-reported accounts.[18] [19] [20]Literary career
Inspiration and early writing
Adeyemi's creative process for the Legacy of Orïsha series began with a pivotal "big bang" moment in 2013, triggered by the shooting death of Trayvon Martin, which fueled her desire to craft a story centered on a young black girl empowered with magic amid systemic oppression, akin to protagonists in Western fantasy like Harry Potter.[13] [21] This personal response to real-world injustice merged with her exploration of Yoruba mythology, where she incorporated Orisha deities—divine beings from West African spiritual traditions—as foundational elements for the series' magical framework and cultural backdrop.[22] Drawing from her Nigerian immigrant family roots, Adeyemi conducted self-directed research into West African history and Yoruba religious practices to authentically synthesize cultural motifs with fantasy conventions, avoiding superficial tropes by grounding the fictional Orïsha in historical and mythological realism rather than derivative Western models.[23] This approach involved dissecting common fantasy elements, such as magic systems and heroic quests, and reimagining them through a lens of causal cultural dynamics, emphasizing empirical ties to ancestral narratives over allegorical overlays.[24] Prior to publication, Adeyemi's early writing efforts included iterative drafting of the initial manuscript over approximately 18 months, during which she refined the core concept while navigating rejections from film school applications, including to programs like USC's cinematic arts, reflecting her initial ambitions in screenwriting before pivoting fully to prose.[25] These pre-publication stages focused on building the interconnected world of gods, divines, and societal hierarchies, informed by her rediscovery of personal heritage through the narrative process.[13]Publication of Legacy of Orïsha trilogy
The Legacy of Orïsha trilogy, published by Henry Holt and Company (an imprint of Macmillan Publishers), originated from a competitive auction in March 2017 for the manuscript of the first book, Children of Blood and Bone, which secured a reported seven-figure advance—one of the largest for a young adult debut at the time.[26][27] The series is set in the fictional kingdom of Orïsha, where magic wielders known as maji—individuals with elemental powers tied to Yoruba-inspired deities—faced systematic extermination a decade prior to the narrative's start, enacted by King Saran to suppress their abilities after a maji-led raid on the palace.[2] This premise frames the maji's plight, marked by white hair in potential diviners (those who may awaken magic at age eleven), as an allegory for historical oppression, with Orïsha's societal divisions mirroring caste-like hierarchies influenced by Nigerian cultural and mythological elements, including spellcasting in Yoruba-derived languages.[28] The first installment, Children of Blood and Bone, released on March 6, 2018, follows diviner Zélie Adebola as she joins forces with the king's fugitive daughter Amari to retrieve a scroll enabling a ritual to restore magic during a three-day window before a lunar alignment closes it permanently, amid pursuits by royal forces. Structurally, the narrative employs multiple perspectives to explore themes of resistance against authoritarian control, with maji clans representing specialized affinities (e.g., Reapers for death magic, Burners for fire) that underscore causal chains of power imbalance and retaliation.[2] The sequel, Children of Virtue and Vengeance, published December 3, 2019, shifts to the aftermath of partial magic restoration, depicting escalating civil war as revived maji grapple with unstable powers and internal fractures, while non-magic nobles (solders) face their own vulnerabilities. The third and final book, Children of Anguish and Anarchy, appeared on June 25, 2024, concluding the arc after delays from an initial post-2019 trajectory, amid the author's reported personal and creative challenges in sustaining the expansive world-building across volumes.[4][29] The trilogy's progression reveals thematic tensions in power dynamics, where initial suppression evolves into chaotic resurgence, highlighting realism in how restored agency among the maji leads to factional strife rather than unified triumph.[2]Subsequent works and projects
Following the release of Children of Anguish and Anarchy on June 25, 2024, which concluded the Legacy of Orïsha trilogy, Tomi Adeyemi has not published any additional novels, short stories, or contributions to anthologies as of October 2025.[4][30] Her official website lists only the trilogy as her body of published fiction, with no announcements of forthcoming literary projects.[30] The extended gap between Children of Virtue and Vengeance (March 2019) and Children of Anguish and Anarchy—spanning over five years—reflected creative challenges, including difficulties re-establishing a writing routine after the rapid production of the first two books and the pressures of early fame.[23][31] Adeyemi has described the accelerated pace of initial writing as leaving an "unpleasant taste," prompting a period of reevaluation rather than continued output at the same velocity.[31] In a 2024 interview, she characterized the trilogy's end as closing a seven-year chapter, signaling a pivot away from Orïsha's world.[29] Post-trilogy, Adeyemi's projects have emphasized screenwriting, including her adaptation of the Legacy of Orïsha series for Paramount Pictures, alongside collaborations with studios such as Disney, Amazon, and Netflix.[5] She maintains an ongoing practice as a creative writing coach, offering guidance to aspiring authors, though this predates the trilogy's completion and does not appear to have supplanted new fiction entirely.[32] No verifiable non-fiction works or stalled novel announcements have emerged in the intervening period.[5]Media and adaptations
Film and television deals
Prior to the March 2018 publication of Children of Blood and Bone, the novel secured film rights with Fox 2000 Pictures and Temple Hill Productions in a deal that generated significant pre-release industry interest.[33] This early optioning contributed to the book's auction fetching a seven-figure advance, highlighting the perceived commercial potential for adaptation amid a surge in demand for diverse fantasy narratives.[34] Following the 2019 Disney acquisition of Fox, rights negotiations shifted, ultimately landing with Paramount Pictures in January 2022 for the entire Legacy of Orïsha trilogy as a three-film franchise.[35] The agreement included a seven-figure screenwriting guarantee for Adeyemi, alongside her roles as screenwriter, executive producer, and holder of creative approvals, ensuring substantial author oversight amid production uncertainties.[36] These studio transitions delayed development, as multiple entities—including Disney, Universal, Amazon, and Netflix—competed before Paramount prevailed, reflecting competitive bidding but also logistical hurdles in aligning creative visions.[37] Gina Prince-Bythewood was announced as director in 2022, co-writing the screenplay with Adeyemi, with principal photography commencing in South Africa in early 2025 for a planned January 2027 theatrical and IMAX release of the first installment.[38] No television adaptations have been confirmed for the series, though the film's scope—encompassing action-fantasy elements inspired by West African mythology—positions it as a cinematic priority over episodic formats.[39]Other media appearances
Adeyemi has engaged in various promotional appearances, including literary panels and interviews focused on fantasy world-building and cultural influences in her narratives. At the 2024 National Book Festival on August 24, she joined Vanessa Le for the session "My Heritage Is My Weapon," where they examined how personal heritage shapes fantasy storytelling and character development.[40] The event included a subsequent book signing for Children of Anguish and Anarchy.[41] In promotion of Children of Anguish and Anarchy's June 2024 release, Adeyemi toured U.S. bookstores, appearing at Barnes & Noble Union Square in New York on June 25 for a discussion and signing.[42] The following day, June 26, she visited Mahogany Books in Washington, D.C., to address themes of the trilogy's conclusion.[43] Additional stops included Anderson's Bookshop for an in-person release celebration.[44] She featured on the Black & Published podcast episode "It's All Connected" on August 5, 2024, exploring interconnections in her creative process and series evolution.[45] In a June 25, 2024, Good Morning America interview, Adeyemi detailed the five-year development gap and narrative innovations in the final installment.[46] At the Imaginarium Book Festival in 2025, Adeyemi delivered a reading from her works, engaging attendees on fantasy elements before a signing session.[47] Earlier, in 2018, she contributed to the San Diego Comic-Con panel "Let's Get Real About Fantasy," discussing authentic world-building techniques in young adult speculative fiction.[48] In July 2025, she held a London event with actor Zai Sylla, featuring conversation on her trilogy followed by audience Q&A and meet-and-greet.[49]Professional activities beyond writing
Modeling and acting
Adeyemi participated in Harvard University's theater scene during her undergraduate years, serving as a producer for the Hasty Pudding Theatricals and choreographing the 2014 campus production of Bat Boy.[50][51] She also performed as a dancer with the hip-hop troupe Expressions.[50] Following her 2015 graduation, Adeyemi pursued modeling in New York City, where she is based, featuring in photoshoots photographed by Oye Diran, Caroline Fiss, and Hannah Tharts.[52][53] In March 2020, she attended Paris Fashion Week and documented her experience at the Valentino show, which highlighted garments modeled by 39 Black individuals.[54] Adeyemi further engaged with modeling in 2024 by participating in a camp led by supermodel Coco Rocha.[29] In acting, Adeyemi received credit for the television series Your Attention Please, which aired starting in 2020.[55]Speaking and coaching
Adeyemi delivers keynote speeches on creative writing craft and motivational topics at literary festivals, conferences, and professional gatherings. She presented virtually at the Louisville Book Festival in October 2020, sharing insights on writing and publishing processes.[56] In June 2019, she appeared as a speaker at the American Library Association Annual Conference.[57] Adeyemi is represented by agencies including CAA Speakers and AAE Speakers Bureau for such engagements, with bookings handled through professional inquiries.[58][59] In addition to public speaking, Adeyemi operates as a creative writing coach, offering structured online programs for aspiring authors. Her course "The Writer's Roadmap" provides over 10 video lessons covering story refinement, compelling character development, world-building, cinematic story structure, and outlining techniques, such as for Act I.[60] Another program, "Finish Your First Draft," teaches strategies to refine story ideas, construct character ensembles, develop settings, and complete initial drafts.[61] She also shares free resources like "Your Page-Turning Plot," a video training on her outlining system for plotting stories.[62] These initiatives draw directly from Adeyemi's experience as a bestselling novelist to guide participants in producing marketable narratives.[63]Activism and public views
Ties to Black Lives Matter and social justice
Adeyemi has stated that the Black Lives Matter movement, which gained prominence following the 2013 acquittal in the Trayvon Martin case and escalated with events like the 2014 Ferguson unrest after Michael Brown's death, profoundly influenced the conception of her debut novel Children of Blood and Bone. In 2015, while studying abroad in Brazil, she encountered a viral image pairing a Black Lives Matter protester with a photograph of a white-painted diviner from Yoruba tradition, sparking the story's premise of maji—magic users facing genocidal oppression by a ruling class—as an allegory for anti-Black police violence and systemic racism in the United States.[64] [65] This inspiration aligned with BLM's documentation of over 1,000 police killings annually, disproportionately affecting Black individuals, including high-profile cases from 2015 such as the Charleston church massacre and Freddie Gray's death in Baltimore, which fueled nationwide protests through 2018. Adeyemi explicitly linked the novel's themes of fear-driven persecution to her experiences as a Black woman amid these events, noting that "every obstacle and conflict in the book is connected to the fear of black people" prevalent in American society.[66] [27] [12] No verified records exist of Adeyemi's direct participation in BLM-organized protests, financial donations to the movement, or formal endorsements of its leadership during this period; her primary connection manifests through the artistic genesis of her work rather than organizational activism. Critics have noted that while the allegory draws from empirical patterns of U.S. racial violence, overlaying them onto a fictional Orïsha—modeled on pre-colonial Nigerian polities—may prioritize emotional resonance over precise historical causation, potentially eliding the autonomous agency of Yoruba kingdoms in resisting external domination through indigenous institutions like the Oyo Empire's cavalry-based expansions from the 17th to 19th centuries.[67][68]Perspectives on cultural representation
Adeyemi has advocated for increased cultural representation in young adult fantasy, arguing that the genre historically underrepresented black protagonists and non-Western mythologies. In a 2019 interview, she described her motivation for Children of Blood and Bone as stemming from frustration over the absence of black girls wielding magic in epic tales, leading her to integrate elements of Yoruba mythology, such as orishas and ritualistic magic systems, into an Afrocentric narrative framework.[69][70] This approach, which she ties to the "black girl magic" ethos celebrating resilient black female characters, aimed to provide readers with affirming depictions amid a landscape dominated by Eurocentric tropes like Arthurian legends and Tolkien-inspired worlds.[71] Prior to the 2018 publication of her debut, black authors in YA fantasy remained scarce, reflecting broader publishing trends where, from 1950 to 2018, only about 5 percent of widely read English-language novels from major publishers were by black writers, with even lower representation in speculative genres.[72] Adeyemi critiqued this dominance, positing that Western fantasy's focus on pale-skinned heroes perpetuated cultural erasure, and her work sought to counter it by foregrounding African-inspired cosmologies without diluting their authenticity for broader appeal. Empirical sales data post-2018 indicate a modest uptick in Afrofantasy titles, though overall diversity in major imprints hovered around 3.3 percent for black-authored books during comparable periods, suggesting market saturation claims may overstate shifts relative to persistent underrepresentation.[73] Debates surrounding Adeyemi's emphasis on representation have included accusations of tokenism from some quarters, where critics argue that industry incentives for diversity can prioritize demographic checkboxes over narrative merit, potentially fostering superficial inclusion rather than organic storytelling. However, Adeyemi's defenders, including literary analysts, counter that her Yoruba-infused world-building demonstrates substantive cultural integration, evidenced by the trilogy's global sales exceeding 1 million copies by 2019 and influence on subsequent titles blending African myth with fantasy. Right-leaning commentators have occasionally framed such advocacy as contributing to "forced diversity" pressures, but Adeyemi's commercial viability—rooted in pre-existing reader demand for varied mythologies—undermines narratives of unearned inclusion, aligning instead with causal market dynamics where underrepresented voices fill evident gaps.[74][75]Reception and impact
Commercial success
Children of Blood and Bone, Adeyemi's debut novel published on March 6, 2018, by Henry Holt and Company, was acquired in a seven-figure publishing deal encompassing the full Legacy of Orïsha trilogy alongside film rights sold to Fox 2000.[76] [77] The book debuted at number one on the New York Times Young Adult Hardcover bestseller list and maintained a presence on the list for 105 weeks.[78] Its sequel, Children of Virtue and Vengeance, released on March 5, 2019, also reached number one on the same list.[79] The Legacy of Orïsha trilogy has collectively sold over 3 million copies worldwide as of 2024.[80] Initial print runs and unit sales reflected strong market demand, with Children of Blood and Bone contributing to top rankings in young adult fantasy categories during its launch period.[81] International rights for the series were secured in competitive auctions, including a six-figure deal with Macmillan Children's Books in the United Kingdom.[82] The West African-inspired setting drew particular interest in African markets, positioning the work as a milestone for the region's literature in global publishing.[77] Translations and distribution extended to European territories, bolstering its cross-continental commercial footprint.[33]Awards and critical praise
Children of Blood and Bone (2018), Adeyemi's debut novel, garnered multiple literary awards recognizing its contributions to young adult fantasy. It received the Andre Norton Nebula Award for Young Adult Science Fiction and Fantasy from the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America in 2018.[7] The book also won the Lodestar Award for Best Young Adult Book, presented as part of the Hugo Awards by Worldcon voters, in 2019.[83] Additionally, it claimed the Waterstones Children's Book Prize in the Older Fiction category in 2019, selected by a panel of booksellers and young readers for its imaginative storytelling.| Award | Year | Category/Work |
|---|---|---|
| Andre Norton Nebula Award | 2018 | Children of Blood and Bone |
| Lodestar Award (Hugo) | 2019 | Children of Blood and Bone |
| Waterstones Children's Book Prize | 2019 | Older Fiction: Children of Blood and Bone |