Ará’lúèbó: The Immigrant Monologues
Autor KÁNYIN Olorunnisolaen Limba Engleză Paperback – 15 mar 2026
The Yoruba word Ará’lúèbó (/ah-rah-loo-ay-bow/), as the book tells us, means “an endearing term for a native who has gone abroad, and/or is returning” or “a person who becomes a foreigner everywhere they go.”
In his debut poetry collection, KÁNYIN Olorunnisola showcases the expansiveness of the immigrant experience through the form of the choreopoem, a non-Western style of poetry that incorporates elements of music and theater. The collection tells a multitude of stories through five people (Odunsi, beja, Levi, Sekina, and Ismaila), who, though fictional, represent the emotional truths of the lived experience of an African residing in the United States. As Ismaila says early on, “we r five fly kids hyphenated by time & / geography.”
Mixing Yoruba, Nigerian Pidgin, and English, Ará’lúèbó: The Immigrant Monologues is a blend of linguistic influences, with debts to visual art and rap music. At the center of its expression is formal experimentation; poems are structured like movie screenplays, diary entries, flowcharts, pie charts, and dictionary entries. The book encompasses a broad span of American, African, and other world history, even as it is strongly rooted in the contemporary, with references to Lauryn Hill, Kendrick Lamar, and other Black creatives. Ultimately, the book asks who is allowed to belong and paints a portrait of what it means to be American and from elsewhere.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781968209001
ISBN-10: 196820900X
Pagini: 104
Dimensiuni: 178 x 229 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Editura: ACRE BOOKS
Colecția Acre Books
ISBN-10: 196820900X
Pagini: 104
Dimensiuni: 178 x 229 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Editura: ACRE BOOKS
Colecția Acre Books
Notă biografică
KÁNYIN Olorunnisola is a multidisciplinary experimentalist of Yoruba descent. His writing has appeared in The Georgia Review, The Chicago Review of Books, Al Jazeera, FIYAH Literary Magazine of Black Speculative Fiction, and elsewhere. His debut short film, Chiaroscuro, premiered at the 2024 Rising Tide Film Festival. He is the founder of Sprinng Inc., a literary nonprofit, and a former nonfiction editor of the Black Warrior Review. He lives in Boston, Massachusetts. For more information, visit www.kanyinolorunnisola.com.
Cuprins
Title Page
The Ara’luebo Chorus: A Prologue (A Choreopoem)
ARA’LUEBO I: Odunsi
1. The Ghost of SX MPhil
2. Alien Monologue #1
3. Willi Ninja
4. Adieu Freres
5. Me, Malcolm & the Smoking Gun
6. For You, Anton Fransch (1969 – 1989)
7. Ode to William Dorsey Swann, the Queen Himself (1860 – 1925)
8. Did You Hear About the Flaming Queens?
9. Nasty Boys
10. Brotherhood
11. Text Dada & the Crew & Let’s Have the Sickest Nigerian Night-Out Ever
12. I Hear the Monkeys Love to Dance
ARA’LUEBO II: beja
1. monologue on the first date: an oversharing masterclass
2. i ask google for my biography & it tells me all the definitions of the word “black”
3. ara’luebo as punchline
4. nomenclature (the audience wears beja’s shoes)
5. alien monologue #2
6. confessions upon hearing george michael’s “fastlove” for the first time
7. Retroactively Liveblogging the "Miss World" Riots. November 2002. Kaduna, Nigeria. (or the One Where beja Recollects Trauma)
8. letter to mother
ARA’LUEBO III: Sekina
1. (self-)portrait as anybody’s favorite girl
2. Christening
3. grandma diaries
4. sekina versus her mother aka mama sekina aka ms. khadija
5. mama sekina’s psychogeography (sekina’s mother gets a solo)
6. talking to this socialist chick at the lauryn hill costume party
7. alien monologue #3
8. Me, Viola Davis & Hattie McDaniel Make a Dadaist Film circa 1863
9. how sekina is feeling today
10. how sekina is feeling today (reprise)
11. The Miracle of the Red Sea in My Bedroom
ARA’LUEBO IV: Levi
1. A Three-Tongued Dirge for all My 3 AM Cigars
2. White Fish (Ara’luebo Discovers Beauty)
3. Shake It, Sweet Thing
4. Chiaroscuro
5. Upon Seeing a Queer-Coded Portrait
6. alien monologue #4: levi
7. Levi’s Reckoning
8. Ara’luebo Sestina (The Audience Wears Levi’s Shoes)
9. Western Culture I
10. Western Culture II
11. A Pantoum for My Executioner
12. diptych for the god of fate
13. Someday, I’ll Love Me
ARA’LUEBO V: Ismaila
1. 21 Reasons I Am Mad at White People
2. Shakespeare in di Ghetto
3. Redneck Monologue
4. Ismaila’s Soliloquy [duet with k.dot]
5. alien monologue #5
6. Di One Where di Roughnecks Flip di World Upside Down While Looking Fab as Fuck
7. POV: The Quiet Cousin at the Immigrant Family Reunion
8. A Very Niggaish Ars Poetica
9. Who is Built to Survive dis Shit?
Epilogue: The Ara’luebo Chorus (A Choreopoem )
Acknowledgments
The Ara’luebo Chorus: A Prologue (A Choreopoem)
ARA’LUEBO I: Odunsi
1. The Ghost of SX MPhil
2. Alien Monologue #1
3. Willi Ninja
4. Adieu Freres
5. Me, Malcolm & the Smoking Gun
6. For You, Anton Fransch (1969 – 1989)
7. Ode to William Dorsey Swann, the Queen Himself (1860 – 1925)
8. Did You Hear About the Flaming Queens?
9. Nasty Boys
10. Brotherhood
11. Text Dada & the Crew & Let’s Have the Sickest Nigerian Night-Out Ever
12. I Hear the Monkeys Love to Dance
ARA’LUEBO II: beja
1. monologue on the first date: an oversharing masterclass
2. i ask google for my biography & it tells me all the definitions of the word “black”
3. ara’luebo as punchline
4. nomenclature (the audience wears beja’s shoes)
5. alien monologue #2
6. confessions upon hearing george michael’s “fastlove” for the first time
7. Retroactively Liveblogging the "Miss World" Riots. November 2002. Kaduna, Nigeria. (or the One Where beja Recollects Trauma)
8. letter to mother
ARA’LUEBO III: Sekina
1. (self-)portrait as anybody’s favorite girl
2. Christening
3. grandma diaries
4. sekina versus her mother aka mama sekina aka ms. khadija
5. mama sekina’s psychogeography (sekina’s mother gets a solo)
6. talking to this socialist chick at the lauryn hill costume party
7. alien monologue #3
8. Me, Viola Davis & Hattie McDaniel Make a Dadaist Film circa 1863
9. how sekina is feeling today
10. how sekina is feeling today (reprise)
11. The Miracle of the Red Sea in My Bedroom
ARA’LUEBO IV: Levi
1. A Three-Tongued Dirge for all My 3 AM Cigars
2. White Fish (Ara’luebo Discovers Beauty)
3. Shake It, Sweet Thing
4. Chiaroscuro
5. Upon Seeing a Queer-Coded Portrait
6. alien monologue #4: levi
7. Levi’s Reckoning
8. Ara’luebo Sestina (The Audience Wears Levi’s Shoes)
9. Western Culture I
10. Western Culture II
11. A Pantoum for My Executioner
12. diptych for the god of fate
13. Someday, I’ll Love Me
ARA’LUEBO V: Ismaila
1. 21 Reasons I Am Mad at White People
2. Shakespeare in di Ghetto
3. Redneck Monologue
4. Ismaila’s Soliloquy [duet with k.dot]
5. alien monologue #5
6. Di One Where di Roughnecks Flip di World Upside Down While Looking Fab as Fuck
7. POV: The Quiet Cousin at the Immigrant Family Reunion
8. A Very Niggaish Ars Poetica
9. Who is Built to Survive dis Shit?
Epilogue: The Ara’luebo Chorus (A Choreopoem )
Acknowledgments
Recenzii
“‘Let me be whatever I name myself,’ says one or perhaps more than one speaker toward the end of this deeply haunted and haunting book for those ‘who were called aliens in their own home.’ From DC to Oakland to the whole ‘afterlife of America,’ home is an ever-shifting experience, narrated and sung by an unforgettable cast of immigrant voices. The legacies and ongoing violences of colonialism, imperialism, and racism are real—but also real, very real, are the powers of language and love. In these poems love is language, the most inventive and soulful. At the same time, love is reckoning with history and confronting the self/selves. Love is the brilliance of this brilliant poet’s rage: ‘Rage against / the dying of your light & when you are long gone, / I swear this to you: You will live on in my rage.’”
“KÁNYIN's poems shimmer with the clay from when we came; they illuminate and yet stalk the shadows they inhabit. They leap from the spotlight of the page to our souls where they stage a sit-in and never leave. The Immigrant Monologues is an endlessly inventive, opulent, masterful, nuanced, and urgent constellation of voices that chorus the songs of our time. Listen, and listen well.”
“‘We are all here, and look!’ Radical poems and forms startle in this stunning debut. Like Ntozake Shange’s choreopoems, invented personas take a similar solace in collective moves and memory. Within the poet’s light the Black diaspora is divine; the self contains multitudes. These poems lend fresh eyes to wounds both personal and communal. With this work, Olorunnisola makes his own place within language. He builds himself a forever home.”
“KÁNYIN has arrived, and in this book, he opens a new door in the rich poetic traditions of Nigeria, one that swings wide toward experiment, polyphony, queerness, and the complexities of diaspora life. In Ará’lúèbó: The Immigrant Monologues, KÁNYIN Olorunnisola walks through that door with clarity and a deft, restless language into a bold new territory. Through choreopoem, monologue, lyric essay, and prayer, these poems travel the fault lines of America and move through Nigeria’s unfinished histories with unsparing intensity. What astonishes me in these poems is KÁNYIN's ability to braid theory and street-speak, archive and nightclub, Yoruba oríkì and ball-culture into one burning voice of survival and praise. Formally wild yet emotionally exact, this book honors the murdered and disappeared even as it revels in the absurd, tender, defiantly queer joys of diaspora life.”