Yomi Sode is an award winning Nigerian British writer. His debut
collection Manorism, published by Penguin in October 2022 alongside
a stage adaptation at the Southbank Centre, was shortlisted for the
Rathbones Folio Prize 2023 and the T S Eliot Prize 2022. He was
shortlisted for the Brunel International African Poetry Prize 2021
and received the Jerwood Compton Poetry Fellowship in 2019. Yomi's
acclaimed one-man show COAT toured nationally to sold-out
audiences, including at the Brighton Festival, Roundhouse Camden
and the Battersea Arts Centre. In 2020, his libretto Remnants,
written in collaboration with award-winning composer James B.
Wilson and performed with Chineke! Orchestra premiered on BBC Radio
3.
In 2021, his play, and breathe... premiered at the Almeida Theatre
to rave reviews. Yomi is a Complete Works alumnus and a member of
Malika's Poetry Kitchen. He is the founder of BoxedIn, First Five,
The Daddy Diaries and mentorship programme 12 in 12.
Manorism is a wonder of a collection. Yomi writes into the space
where silence has been enforced, with language so dexterous it
sings, with an honesty that is as sure as it is vulnerable.
Throughout the collection, he gives language to grief, acute and
enormous. He speaks not only to the moments we might falter in the
face of our mourning but also to how we might rebuild, how we might
not only survive those who pass, but thrive. What a joy it is to
hold these words
*Caleb Azumah Nelson, author of OPEN WATER*
The mandem, mourning, mores and manners - Yomi Sode's Manorism is a
thrilling new world to inhabit. Tender, lyrical, questioning,
fierce, these poems make you think about the world we live in and
how we treat the black men in it . . . This is one of those books
that comes along once in a generation and influences generations to
come
*Jackie Kay, author of RED DUST ROAD and former Makar of
Scotland*
Yomi Sode writes with clarity, anger and love. Manorism reminds me
of the paintings of Caravaggio. Empathy and chiaroscuro. More
shadow than light. But that is the way of the world
*Andrew Graham-Dixon, author of CARAVAGGIO: A LIFE SACRED AND
PROFANE*
Vivid, beautiful and deeply moving. Yomi Sode is a gifted
storyteller who pours everything into this sharp and brilliant
exploration of Black British masculinity in all its complexity
*Rt Hon Diane Abbott MP*
Searing, shimmering, brilliant. As hard to swallow as it is to put
down.
*Yrsa Daley-Ward, author of THE HOW*
A remarkable, textured education in what it means to be made up of
different parts, of light and dark places, and of worlds that we
know, and that we don't. Yomi Sode is a beautiful storyteller who
pieces it all together
*Candice Carty-Williams, author of PEOPLE PERSON*
I don't think I've ever read such a heartbreaking collection as
this angry but deeply vulnerable and tender portrait of Black
masculinity. Manorism rages, yet plays with its urgent themes,
mixing Yoruba with colloquial speech in a luscious mix of registers
and references, from Caravaggio to Mr Marcus, inventing new ways to
describe generational trauma and what it's like to endure racism.
This debut is the living heart and soul of contemporary poetry
*Pascale Petit, author of TIGER GIRL*
In his juxtapositions of paintings, black urban life and media, he
makes us think of what poetry can be: that the book itself is the
poem, and each topic a stanza in a bigger epiphany ... A must for
all lovers of poetry and its power
*Roger Robinson, author of A PORTABLE PARADISE*
When I speak of justice and anger written with luminous genius, I
will forever be speaking of Yomi Sode's Manorism, a glorious,
furious collection that tells a thousand stories in stunningly
crafted verse. A triumph that everyone should read
*Nikita Gill, author of GREAT GODDESSES and WILD EMBERS*
Manorism is a stunning debut collection. Yomi Sode's poems examine
the various lenses observing the black body in Britain, the
implications of its passage between class, cultural and racial
spaces. His words are indelible . . . rich with images that shake
your core and a sharpness in its technicality. Manorism is a
classic
*Caleb Femi, author of POOR*
Manorism is a work of sincerity that cuts deep. It's a work that is
at once comprehensive and incredibly personal. Reading it I felt my
heartbeat change pace, faster and slower. The book is about
families, society, being Black in Britain, being a cousin, a
nephew, a son and the hope for the future that being a father
brings. Yomi is a griot, a voice in which we can hear the
ancestors, a voice for now and a prophet of future
possibilities
*Arike Oke, Executive Director of Knowledge and Collections,
BFI*
This is a such an important collection. Yomi Sode's debut
articulates the most subtle nuances of Black British Masculinity
with a breathtaking vulnerability. Truly, Manorism is something new
- an interrogation of realities that have been too often ignored,
through the lens of experiences that have been pushed into the
margins . . . [It] bring[s] the full humanity of Blackness into the
centre, through poetry that pushes at boundaries while inviting you
in
*Jeffrey Boakye, author of I HEARD WHAT YOU SAID and BLACK,
LISTED*
Manorism. A Black British Diasporic way of being. A sense of place.
A posture . . . Yomi Sode interrogates this sociocultural
phenomenon, looking at masculinity, intergenerational violence and
historical legacy . . . This is a British continuation of the
conversation Claudia Rankine started . . . These are necessary
poems: poems as prayer songs, poems as testimony
*Malika Booker, author of PEPPER SEED*
A brilliant ode to the mandem
*Femi Oyeniran*
Manorism is filled with poetry of a breath held, a fist clenched
and held behind the back, the knockout beckoning always. An
ambitious and adventurous debut, brimming with heart
*Nii Ayikwei Parkes, author of TAIL OF THE BLUE BIRD*
The birth of a new poetic storyteller
*Nick Makoha, author of THE DARK*
Yomi is not ramping. This is a rich, nuanced, emotional collection.
I read about myself and my people, felt an affinity in the
expression of experiences we share and felt feelings only we feel.
Thank you for this, Yomi
*Jade LB, author of KEISHA THE SKET*
Both sharp-eyed and rich with complex feeling, Manorism is an
exquisite collection
*Nadia Owusu, author of AFTERSHOCKS*
Part-confession, part-conjuring and wholly unique, Yomi Sode's
debut collection is unflinching. As he writes, "Our stories are
open wounds." ?ode takes us on a visceral journey, spilling secrets
nakedly, not allowing us to look away from the hard truth. And
we're better for it
*Peter Kahn, author of LITTLE KINGS*
An incredibly poignant and layered collection that masterfully
graduates from the past, roots us in the present and speaks to the
ages all at once. Manorism is a striking, visceral voyage between
cultures, languages and histories in ode to the precious lives of
Black boys and men
*Sofia Akel*
I think one day, Yomi Sode's Manorism will be required reading for
a generation of young Black men. [This book is h]is widescreen and
expansive examination of what it's like to navigate the
complexities of British society as a Black man. From the moments of
triumph to those of bleak loss, Sode brings poetic brilliance to
the collection's entire range of subject matter
*Athian Akec, Youth MP for Camden*
A breathtaking and tender exploration of Black boyhood, manhood,
fatherhood and grief
*Aniefiok Ekpoudom*
A work of formal experimentation, where lyric essays nestle against
play-let structures, in service of a Claudia Rankine-esque
determination to bear witness and find frameworks with which we can
look at the world properly, fully ... Brilliant ... It's like
fireworks going off ... Sode is unflinching and fearless ...
Manorism's real gift to us as readers is, ultimately, Sode's deep
and unfailing humanity. This is a book in which love can be
found
*Poetry School Blog*
Yomi Sode's Manorism has both its feet planted firmly on the ground
- but as a collection, it spends much of its existence split
between various opposing worlds of imagination: Black and white,
past and present, peaceful and chaotic . . . It forces readers to
question what violence we consider beautiful, which victims worthy
of framing and hanging on a white wall? . . . Manorism cuts to the
quick, openly daring readers to look at the blood spilled within
its pages . . . [It] gleams like a whittled blade
*Magma Poetry*
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