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Yoruba Mythology

Stories of the Orisa from West Africa and the Diaspora

Contributors

By Ayodeji Ogunnaike, Ph.D.

By Oludamini Ogunnaike

Illustrated by Data Oruwari

Formats and Prices

On Sale
Oct 20, 2026
Page Count
336 pages
ISBN-13
9780762485482

Price

$18.99

Price

$24.99 CAD

Format

Format:

  1. ebook $18.99 $24.99 CAD
  2. Hardcover $45.00 $57.00 CAD

The first major work of Yoruba mythology, retelling hundreds of traditional tales of the Oriṣa, Yoruba Heroes, and Ijapa from West Africa, Cuba, and Brazil.

Yoruba mythology is sacred to the religion and culture of the Yoruba people of West Africa and millions in diaspora in Brazil, Cuba, and beyond. A primarily oral tradition, its stories revolve around Olodumare, the Supreme Being and the source of all creation, and a vast number of divinities, or Oriṣa, who govern all aspects of human life and nature, including Eṣu (communication and chaos), Ọrunmila (wisdom, order, and divination), Oriṣanla (creation and purity), Ṣango (lightning, royalty, dance, and drumming), Ọya (storm winds and change), Yẹmọja (motherhood and rivers/oceans), and Ọṣun (love, fertility, and sweet water).

Yoruba Mythology is, to date, the most comprehensive published collection of more than 300 myths of this ancient, profound, and beautiful storytelling tradition. Authors Ayodeji Ogunnaike and Oludamini Ogunnaike are uniquely qualified to impart these stories, having spent decades learning, collecting, and studying them. Many are remembered from their own childhood, told regularly to Yoruba children by way of instruction on behavior and navigating the world around them, while many more are the result of yearslong research and encounters with practitioners and elders in and from Nigeria, Cuba, and Brazil. 

Alongside the myths of the oriṣa, the Ogunnaikes also include dozens of myths of more cultural significance, such as the founding of Yoruba kingdoms, stories of heroes and other powerful beings, and classic fables. A final section is dedicated to the beloved Ijapa, the Yoruba trickster tortoise whose cunning and greed always land him in trouble, but who, through his antics, creates not only belly laughs, but also valuable lessons about honesty, perseverance, and character.  

The book is made complete with stunning and distinguished art by Data Oruwari, whose passion and precision brings the myths and characters to life in a stunning fashion that evokes the traditional depictions of the Oriṣa in West Africa and the diaspora.

A gift to both those familiar to Yoruba culture and religion and those who are encountering them for the first time, Yoruba Mythology is an important and long-awaited contribution to the mythological canon.


Ayodeji Ogunnaike, Ph.D.

About the Author

Ayodeji Ogunnaike, PhD, is the Assistant Professor of African Religions and Canada Research Chair (Tier 2) in the Globalization of Yoruba Mythology and African Religion at McGill University. His research focuses mostly on Yoruba oriṣa worship in Nigeria but also addresses Islam in Africa, Christianity in Africa, and diaspora religions—Brazilian Candomblé in particular. He studied Ifa divination with a high priest and diviner in Nigeria and has a keen interest in Indigenous African conceptions of divinity and mythology. He is the author of Forms of Worship: How Oriṣa Worship Became Religion in Nigeria and Brazil (Duke University Press, 2026), and he lives in Montreal, Canada.
Oludamini Ogunnaike, PhD, is the Associate Professor of African Religious Thought and Democracy at the University of Virginia. His research examines the philosophical and artistic dimensions of postcolonial, colonial, and pre-colonial Islamic and Indigenous religious traditions of West and North Africa, especially Sufism and Ifa. He is the author of Deep Knowledge: Ways of Knowing in Sufism and Ifa, Two West African Intellectual Traditions (Penn State University Press, 2020), winner of the Outstanding First Book Prize of the Association for the Study of the Worldwide African Diaspora (ASWAD), and Poetry in Praise of Prophetic Perfection: A Study of West African Madīḥ Poetry and Its Precedents (Islamic Texts Society, 2020). He lives in Charlottesville, Virginia.
Data Oruwari, also known as The Ancestors’ Scribe,” is a Nigerian-born, Virginia-based visionary artist whose work channels divine intelligence and ancestral wisdom. Working primarily in pen and ink and gold leaf, her iconographic style, marked by meticulous detail and symbolic depth, explores Afro-spiritual cosmology and the interconnectedness of the spiritual and material realms. She lives in Virginia. 

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