Born and raised in the United States to Nigerian immigrant parents, Adeyemi grew up straddling two cultures—immersed in the myths and legends passed down through her family while also navigating the expectations of a modern American upbringing. It wasn’t until a pivotal trip to Brazil, where she saw African culture celebrated rather than erased, that she realized the power of the stories she'd nearly lost. That realization would become the seed of Children of Blood and Bone, a novel that did more than land on bestseller lists—it galvanized an entire movement in YA fantasy.
Her debut didn’t simply introduce a new world; it roared with righteous magic. Set in the kingdom of Orïsha, Adeyemi’s richly imagined universe pulses with ancestral power, political upheaval, and the fire of a young girl determined to restore magic to her people. With prose that blends lyrical beauty with sharp urgency, her work speaks not only to the fantastical but to the very real struggles against oppression, silencing, and identity erasure. Themes of legacy, grief, and rebellion cut through every page, inviting readers to both dream and awaken.
Tomi Adeyemi’s Legacy of Orïsha series has earned critical acclaim and commercial success, drawing comparisons to J.K. Rowling and Angie Thomas, yet her voice remains wholly her own—unapologetic, bold, and deeply rooted in cultural reclamation. The first book alone claimed a spot on TIME’s 100 Best Fantasy Books of All Time and landed a major film deal with Lucasfilm, cementing her as a literary force with a cross-media reach.
More than an author, she’s a storyteller with a mission: to create space for Black voices in fantasy, to celebrate ancestral magic, and to remind young readers that they, too, can rise up and change the world. As Adeyemi once said, “You are your ancestors’ wildest dreams.” Through her writing, she’s helping the next generation dream even bigger.