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Inua Ellams

Author of The Half-God of Rainfall

18+ Works 146 Members 3 Reviews

Works by Inua Ellams

The Half-God of Rainfall (2019) 63 copies, 2 reviews
Barber Shop Chronicles (2017) 18 copies
The Actual (2020) 13 copies, 1 review
#Afterhours (2017) 7 copies
Afro Margin (2010) 6 copies
Black T Shirt Collection (2012) 5 copies
Cape (2013) 3 copies
Untitled (2010) 1 copy
Plays one (2019) 1 copy
The 14th Tale (Defeye) (2009) 1 copy

Associated Works

This Is the Honey: An Anthology of Contemporary Black Poets (2024) — Contributor — 68 copies, 1 review
Refugee Tales (2016) — Contributor — 46 copies
A Change Is Gonna Come (2017) — Contributor — 38 copies
Eight New-Generation African Poets: A Chapbook Box Set (2015) — Contributor — 22 copies, 1 review
Out of Bounds: British, Black, and Asian Poets (2012) — Contributor — 14 copies
Mount London: Ascents in the Vertical City (2014) — Contributor — 11 copies
Nature Matters: Vital Poems from the Global Majority (2025) — Contributor — 4 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1984-10-23
Gender
male
Nationality
Nigeria (birth)
Associated Place (for map)
Nigeria

Members

Reviews

4 reviews
90/2021. The Actual by Inua Ellams, is his fifth poetry collection (and his umpteenth publication). How did I love this? Let me count the ways. Except I don't have time so here's my execution of a summary.

I love the cover, which gives precisely 46 fucks... gold-plated fucks in fact.

I love the decorative illustrated 2Pac endpapers in recto and verso.

I love the poems, yes, all of them, except page 64 because Fuck / Dust!

I especially loved:

Fuck / Sympathy "Because Christ was the first Black man show more lynched / who went viral /"

Fuck / Border Guards "Heavy-booted and uniformed / the armed who man the borders / of narrative and myth /"

Fuck / Perseus "and Poseidon stayed silent / his crime forgotten when Perseus won / And story by story / myth by myth / urban legend by urban legend / locker room talk by locker room talk / men make other men "

Fuck / Diminutives "/ our tails are dark blue flames / our hooves are coal half-crushed to diamonds / The racecourse is obstacled with glass ceilings / slow squad cars and niggling doubt / Our task is to reach the end with our selves / our names intact /"

Fuck / Logophobia "/ Things we don't have words for in our language don't exist / I have an autistic niece /"

Fuck / Camels (but don't fuck with amusing tall tales about camels, that aren't quotable)

Fuck / The Joker "/ enough to sidestep the foolish machismo /"

And absolutely Fuck / Batman for spreading covid-19!

I do have one minor historical nitpick from Fuck/Empire 4/ about Benin: "There were boys play-fighting in the soft grass / girls with half-braided hair snoozing beside their mothers / There were infants trying to catch flies idling by in the heavy heat / fathers working the wide fields /" Because which gender, in that part of Africa as in most of the pre-mechanised world, did and still does most of the food growing, the food harvesting, the food marketing, and the food preparation? Although there are rare times when there are more men in the fields and more women at home because there's always one exception to any rule (like this is the one exception to the Inua Ellams is always spot on rule, lol).
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Original, inventive, not a retelling or interpretation but a direct response. I like this, I like the nod to classic format as a play in verse, I like the intertwining of Yoruba mythology, and I appreciate the thought behind it all. My reservations may be more about how it was marketed to me, or just where my thoughts have been recently regarding mythologies. And they are: for a story about vengeance from and solidarity for female victims, most of this story centers around men. The heroine show more acts not in defense of herself but her child. The women, the victims, are ultimately mostly unnamed. I'm inclined to think the focus is just on how we-general-society react to the ongoing abuse of women, and that's why, and maybe I just really needed more about specifically Zeus' victims taking him down. Listen, it's been a long quarantine, I listened to a lot of Greek mythology and it revived my grudge with Zeus. 3.5, and maybe I'll raise it. show less
***directly after finishing***
Rage I tell you, rage.

***While reading, to Past-Me***
You're way too snarky Past-Me. Also I had forgotten that this was poetry and it was way too expensive for short a short book. It was only while seeing Chronicles of Noria on YouTube I got reminded that it existed.

Side note: this is written by a man! And I was really surprised

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Statistics

Works
18
Also by
10
Members
146
Popularity
#141,735
Rating
4.1
Reviews
3
ISBNs
42

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