Yoruba mythology is a universe filled with gods, magic, and stories that feel larger than life; tales full of power and emotion that immerse the audience. They tell of gods who weave thunder, fire, beauty, mystery, rivers of water, yet walk like men.
While the Greeks had Zeus, Apollo, and Hera, the Yoruba have Sango, the god of lightning, and Osun, the goddess of love and rivers, numbering among their pantheon.
While these five novels incorporate other themes in their storytelling, Yoruba mythology, and by extension, Yoruba gods, feature heavily in them.
Shigidi and The Brass Head of Obalufon is a 2024 Nommo Award winner that blends Yoruba mythology, supernatural fantasy, corporate satire, romance, and a heist.
Talabi sets gods in a modern framework: the Orisha Spirit Company isn’t just a metaphor, it’s a literal organisation, with bureaucracy, debts, favours, and contracts. Shigidi, a minor god, is forced to work for them.
Shigidi, a god of nightmares, was once feared, respected, and alive with power. Now he’s little more than a tired employee in the vast Orisha Spirit Company, doing the bare minimum to keep existing while his faith and worshippers fade away.
Then he meets Nneoma, a mysterious and alluring spirit who feeds on human desire and carries a past she doesn’t talk about.
Their connection sparks something reckless. Together, they dream of escaping the bureaucracy of the gods and carving out a life beyond divine control. But freedom comes with a price.
The elder deities who run the Orisha company have their own schemes, and it’s not good. Shigidi soon finds himself drawn into a perilous mission: to retrieve the stolen Brass Head of Obalufon, an ancient artefact that could shift the balance of power between gods and men.
The story centres around Zélie Adebola, who still remembers what it felt like when magic lived in Orïsha, when different clans ruled and when her people were powerful and proud.
But a ruthless king destroyed the maji and banned their powers, leaving Zélie’s world hollow and afraid. Now she fights to survive in a land that punishes even the memory of magic.
Everything changes when she crosses paths with a rebellious princess and a stolen scroll that carries a strange, ancient energy.
Suddenly, Zélie has the chance to bring magic back and challenge the empire that shattered her family. But every choice comes with a cost, and power never returns quietly.
An adaptation of the Greek classic Oedipus Rex. Set in a Yoruba-kingdom context, the play, which later became a novel, brings together traditional beliefs, royal politics, and moral struggles that leave you asking whether destiny is fixed or if human choices matter when divine forces are believed to loom large.
Odewale, who is born under a strict prophecy: the gods say he will kill his father and marry his mother. His parents try to prevent this by having him abandoned shortly after birth.
He is rescued, raised by foster parents, educated, and becomes a strong and respected individual. Eventually, he returns to the land of Kutuje, fights battles, and becomes king, unaware that many pieces of the prophecy he and his parents tried to avoid are already in motion.
False security, hot temper, loyalty, confusion, and identity all play individual roles. Odewale’s decisions stem from good intentions, but also from fear, anger, pride, and a desire to do what is right. Those choices lead him closer to fulfilling what the gods foretold from the start.
This debut novel reimagines the Yoruba sea goddess Yemaya in a tale of courage, love, and spiritual awakening set in nineteenth-century America.
The story begins with Yemaya, a young woman still guided by her mother and unaware of the immense power she wields within her.
When she is thrust into a world characterised by slavery and loss, her journey becomes one of discovery: of her strength, her purpose, and the enduring spirit of Black resilience.
As she searches for Obatala, a man who gives up his freedom to protect hers, Yemaya moves from her homeland in Africa to the New World, crossing both time and oceans.
Along the way, she witnesses the brutal beauty of human survival, travels the Underground Railroad, and encounters figures who shape the fight for liberation.
In this epic book, Deborah Falaye draws from Yoruba mythology to tell the story of Sloane Folashadé, a fifteen-year-old girl born with forbidden magic.
She is a Scion, born with the fire of Shango in her blood. When the oppressive Lucis Empire forces her into their brutal army, she must fight to survive without revealing who she truly is.
As she endures the cruelty of war and the loss of innocence it brings, Sloane begins to uncover buried truths about her mother, her magic, and the history her enemies have tried to erase.
Her journey becomes more than survival. It’s about reclaiming her identity, power, and the right to exist in a world built to destroy her kind.
Blood Scion is a fierce and emotionally charged story that blends myth and history into a gripping tale of the fight for freedom, identity, and survival.