Tolu Oloruntoba is the author of chapbook Manubrium, shortlisted for the 2020 bpNichol Chapbook Award His poetry has appeared or is forthcoming in Harvard Divinity Bulletin, PRISM International, Columbia Journal, Obsidian, and Canadian Literature, and has been nominated for the Pushcart Prize. His short fiction has appeared in translation in Dansk PEN Magazine. He practiced medicine before his current work managing projects for health authorities in British Columbia After a somewhat itinerant life in Nigeria and the United States, he emigrated to the Greater Vancouver Area, where he lives with his family in the territories of the Semiahmoo, Katzie, and Kwantlen First Nations.
Judges’ Citation
The Junta of Happenstance, Tolu Oloruntoba’s dazzling debut collection, collides the language of revolution with the landscapes of the body.
The Junta of Happenstance, Tolu Oloruntoba’s dazzling debut collection, collides the language of revolution with the landscapes of the body. These poems go beyond the desire to ward off death. They emerge out of a life intimate with death’s randomness. Like the vicissitudes of war, Oloruntoba’s poems make peace with accident and fate. They bring breath to survival. ‘If the timeline ahead is/ infinitely longer than the/ knives behind, perhaps/ as we set to mending/ we can heal more/ than we ever undid./ But we, too,/ would like a piece of the plunder.’ These exquisite poems leave an imprint both violent and terrifyingly beautiful.
Selected poems
by Tolu Oloruntoba
Africans never presume to count another’s children,
so we don’t know how many they had, the family
ours moved in with, each sidestepping the other.
Mostly. Avoidance was respect: night was their time,
the musical clan tapdancing ceiling boards to pipes,
and winching squeaks from plumbing, chorus stars
above, cosmic dust, pointilist, in sifted asbestos below.
You would go into their kitchen at night for water
and see their conspiracy scattering, snooker balls
struck by light, darting stragglers huffing for the pocket
hole. Easy, having nibbled their doors under ours,
thoroughfare through the house and gourmet gougings
of bread, each mousehole ornate. Losing their shyness,
we occasionally met at dusk, their whiskers tightrope
lances measuring the abyss of air on either side,
sifting our intention, teaching the resonance of mice:
while the world continues to build ours at the edge,
to wrench our microcosm from potential space.
Copyright © 2021, Tolu Oloruntoba, The Junta of Happenstance, Palimpsest Press
Co-exist
Your
one wing
-ed scapula: what does it mean?
Look out, child, clamber above
the fill line of the world:
if we are indeed part
of a continent and not alone,
where is everyone?
Our vise of hands
cannot hold counter-
clockwise flight,
is too confusing for radar:
this carceral island
will never keep us.
On an armspan
altar below
I imbue
the homespun
stone with a blue
animus,
a fletched offering
wind-ing you up.
Copyright © 2021, Tolu Oloruntoba, The Junta of Happenstance, Palimpsest Press
Lookout
- Griffin Trustee Ian Williams Interviews Tolu Oloruntoba
- Tolu Oloruntoba Poet's website
- Griffin Poetry Prize Roundtable 2022 49th Shelf
- 12 or 20 questions rob mclennan’s blog
- 49th Shelf interview GGBooks Special: The Chat with Tolu Oloruntoba