DISTRIBUTED BY THE CHICAGO DISTRIBUTION CENTER

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Books distributed by the Chicago Distribution Center

104 pages | 7 x 9 | © 2026
ISBN: 978-1-968209-00-1
ISBN (ebook): 978-1-968209-01-8

Pre-order Only
Will publish March 2026

Ará’lúèbó

The Immigrant Monologues

KÁNYIN Olorunnisola

A layered exploration of the immigrant identity through the voices of multiple Nigerian American characters.

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. 

Tell others about Ará’lúèbó.

About the Author

KÁNYIN Olorunnisola is a multi-disciplinary experimentalist of Yoruba descent. His writing appears in Georgia Review, Chicago Review of Books, Al Jazeera, FIYAH Magazine of Black Speculative Fiction, and elsewhere. He holds an MFA from the University of Alabama, where he taught creative writing and edited the Black Warrior Review. His debut short film, Chiaroscuro, premiered at the 2024 Rising Tide Film Festival. He is the founder of Sprinng Inc., a literary 501(c)(3) literary organization. For more information about him, visit www.kanyinolorunnisola.com

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Photo Credit: Charley Lightstone