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Onyeka and the Academy of the Sun

Part of Onyeka

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About The Book

Black Panther meets X-Men in this “fast-paced, action-packed, and empowering” (A. F. Steadman, New York Times bestselling author of Skandar and the Unicorn Thief) middle grade adventure about a British Nigerian girl who learns that her Afro hair has psychokinetic powers—perfect for fans of Amari and the Night Brothers, The Marvellers, and Rick Riordan!

Onyeka has a lot of hair­—the kind that makes strangers stop in the street and her peers whisper behind her back. At least she has Cheyenne, her best friend, who couldn’t care less what other people think. Still, Onyeka has always felt insecure about her vibrant curls…until the day Cheyenne almost drowns and Onyeka’s hair takes on a life of its own, inexplicably pulling Cheyenne from the water.

At home, Onyeka’s mother tells her the shocking truth: Onyeka’s psychokinetic powers make her a Solari, one of a secret group of people with superpowers unique to Nigeria. Her mother quickly whisks her off to the Academy of the Sun, a school in Nigeria where Solari are trained. But Onyeka and her new friends at the academy soon have to put their powers to the test as they find themselves embroiled in a momentous battle between truth and lies…

Excerpt

Chapter One

CHAPTER ONE
“Onyeka!”

I flinch, a prickle spreading across my scalp as Cheyenne’s impatient voice cuts through the panic rising in me.

“Come on, fam! While it’s still 2025.”

The already stuffy heat of the changing room grows hotter, and the sharp smell of chlorine stings my nose. I feel like throwing up.

“I’m not coming out,” I mutter at the thick, wooden door separating us.

A quick shuffle of feet, followed by a sharp knock. “The pool’s gonna close at this rate,” Cheyenne replies without any sympathy. “Have you got it on?”

I stare at the swimming cap Mum insisted I wear, resting on the floor where I threw it. I knew it was going to cause me problems.

“It won’t fit,” I say. “I tried already. My hair’s too big.”

Cheyenne makes a noise that sounds both like a sigh and grunt… a srunt. “Can’t you just ditch it?”

I snort back. “You know what Mum will do if my hair gets loose or wet.”

“She won’t find out,” Cheyenne replies. But we both hear the lie in her voice. Mum always finds out. It’s her superpower.

“I’m not coming out,” I repeat, but there’s a wobble in my voice that gives me away. I’m no match for Cheyenne.

She knows it too and pounces immediately, like a cheetah from one of the wildlife documentaries Mum loves. We watch them together the rare times she isn’t working.

“Open up,” Cheyenne hollers, and the whole changing room grows silent around us.

My belly tightens. I hate it when Cheyenne does that. Just because she loves attention doesn’t mean I do too. The already tiny space of the cubicle closes in around me, and my chest tightens, making it difficult to breathe. Energy surges across my skin, but I force it back down. I can’t get upset. I am absolutely not allowed to lose control. It’s Mum’s number one rule.

I remember the first time I felt like this. Mum and I were waiting hand in hand at a bus stop, and a group of kids started making fun of my hair. Mum ignored them, then bent down to me, as if she knew I was about to lose it. Her smile was gentle as she told me that I needed to control my emotions, because bad things would happen if I ever set them free.

This was before she taught me the Fibonacci numbers that help keep my emotions in check. Apparently, it’s some mathematical sequence from ancient India, but someone decided to name it after an Italian guy. It works though. It’s hard to lose your temper when you’re trying to remember what the next number is.

I close my eyes now and start counting, running through the numbers as I try to calm down.

Zero

One

With each number, I trace the shape in my mind, giving it a color, texture, and taste.

Zero is a rough-edged blue and tastes like waffles, no syrup.

One I give a shiny orange with the sharp tang of vinegar.

Bit by bit, the prickle under my skin goes away, but I continue to count, just to be safe.

I’m back to number one again. This time it’s brown and squishy, but with the rich flavor of the doughnuts Mum never lets me have.

Two is a hazy, dull gray. Completely boring and normal.

I stop counting as number two does the trick and my racing heart begins to slow. The door handle rattles and I jump. I’d forgotten about Cheyenne. I unlock the heavy door, and she slips in wearing a blue swimsuit. Her face is shiny, and I can smell the coconut oil wafting from it. She always uses too much. Even in her hair. Today, she’s pulled it into a short Afro puff, held in place by a red, stretchy headband.

It’s weird seeing her without the furry cosplay fox ears that usually rest on her head. Cheyenne is obsessed with Katsuki, her favorite anime character, and she likes to dress up as her. I’m used to it, but I always catch people giving her funny looks. Not that Cheyenne cares what anyone thinks. Sometimes I think she likes standing out because it makes everyone pay attention, as if she’s daring them to say something about her fashion sense. I prefer going unnoticed.

Cheyenne’s got Turner’s syndrome, and she has to take special hormones to help her grow properly. Her mouth is plenty big though. I once watched her shut down a Year Eleven girl with just one sentence. The girl was chatting about my hair, so I guess she deserved it.

“Okay, where is it then?” Cheyenne’s dark eyes scan the small room until she spots the swimming cap. “Well, of course it won’t fit,” she says. “It’s on the floor, you doughnut.”

Cheyenne is older than me, but she likes to act as if it’s by years, not months. She picks up the cap and her eyes widen in understanding. “Rah, is your mum having a laugh?”

“I wish,” I reply. “She thinks it’s cute.” I flatten the u into an oo sound in imitation of Mum’s strong Nigerian accent. Cheyenne smiles in instant recognition, her downturned eyes sparkling with glee.

I don’t smile back. My eyes are fixed on the shiny swimming cap dangling from Cheyenne’s middle finger. The bright white latex is covered in fire-engine-red spots.

Cheyenne’s face is twitching, like she’s trying to keep it straight. “You know what you’re gonna look like with all your hair crammed into that, don’t ya?”

“Shut up,” I groan. Of course I know. It’s all I’ve been thinking about today. I’m going to look like Toad from that classic Super Mario Bros game.

Her eyes shift to my head and the tangle of curls, coils, and kinks sitting on top. It springs straight out of my head in an impressive riot that Mum finds overwhelming, so I rarely leave it loose. My hair has broken more combs, trashed more hair dryers, and made more hairstylists cry than I can count… so maybe Mum has a point.

Straightening it doesn’t work, braids won’t stay in for long, and the only time Mum cut it, the strands grew back bigger and thicker. Now the longest bits that don’t stick straight up or out hang down my back almost to my bum. It always feels dry no matter what I put in it, which doesn’t help. The color is cool though. A black so deep that when the light hits my hair just right, you can see bolts of blue fire shooting through it.

Cheyenne is proper laughing now. “It’s a-me, Mario!” she hollers with glee.

I wish I could laugh back, but I’m too stressed. It was hard enough getting permission to even come swimming in the first place. Now that it’s the school holidays, I’m either at Cheyenne’s house or I have to stay at the salon so Mum can keep an eye on me. I left it until the last possible minute and waited until she was distracted with one of her clients before asking.

“Mum, can I leave early today, please?” I asked.

Her hands stilled and silence descended on the salon. All conversation stopped as eager ears waited to hear Mum’s reply.

“Why?” she finally said.

“Chey’s having a pool party for her birthday,” I replied, not bothering to mention it was a party of two. At the sound of Cheyenne’s name, Mum smiled, and I tried not to get my hopes up. “Please, Mum,” I begged in a loud voice. “You never let me go anywhere.”

“There you go again, always exaggerating,” Mum replied. “Don’t you go to school? Am I imagining your presence beside me at church on Sundays?”

I’ve learned not to answer questions like that. There is no right answer, so I remained silent.

“Why do you two want to go swimming anyway when Cheyenne gets all those ear infections?” she continued. “You can’t even swim very well.”

I ignored the bit about my rubbish swimming skills because she was right and I’d already told Cheyenne as much. Mum was also right about the ear infections. Cheyenne gets them a lot because of the Turner’s syndrome.

“It’s been ages since Chey had one,” I replied instead. “Besides, her mum said it was okay.”

Mum kissed her teeth at me. “I do not want you out and about with so many strangers. You’re not like everyone else.”

Not this again!

“Doesn’t seem to bother you when I’m at the salon,” I muttered under my breath. “There are always random people here!”

“What was that, Onyekachi?”

I plastered an innocent smile on my face. Mum is the only person who uses my full name and it’s usually when I’m in trouble.

“Come on, T?´p?´, let the child have some fun,” Mrs. Mataka said as she passed us on her way to the sink.

Hushed whispers spread across the salon and an annoyed look settled on Mum’s face. She hates standing out almost as much as she hates me standing out. Then her face evened out suddenly, just before she gave in to the peer pressure she’s always warning me about.

“Fine,” Mum finally said, and stunned relief filled me. I was fully ready for her to say no.

“But you must wear a swimming cap,” she added, and the relief melted away. “I don’t have time to wash and blow-dry your hair today.”

Then Mum fully pulled out a swimming cap from one of her styling drawers. Who has a swimming cap just hanging around?

So here I am, trying to fit the ugly thing over my hair, and all Cheyenne can do is laugh. She finally stops spluttering long enough for me to get a word in.

“What am I going to do?” I ask.

“Sorry, fam, but you’re gonna have to pack it up….”

My mouth twists and her voice trails off. Cheyenne meets my gaze again, but there’s no curiosity or pity. Not like I get from others. To Cheyenne, my hair is just another part of me, like the gap between my front teeth and my massive size-eight feet. The same way I see her love of furry fox ears and Marmite. It’s the way I wish the world would see both of us, instead of only focusing on the things that make us different. It’s what drew Cheyenne and me together in the first place.

That, and the fact she’s the only other Nigerian I know. Mum never talks about Nigeria or why we left, so the little I know about how it became so rich and powerful comes from history class. It’s been this way for as long as I can remember.

Before she found work in the salon, Mum cleaned toilets in one of the local primary schools. She was so thin then, her secondhand clothes hanging off her. She doesn’t think I remember, but I do. I also remember how long it took for her to find a salon willing to ignore the fact she doesn’t have a British passport and also willing to pay in cash.

“Everyone is going to be looking at me,” I tell Cheyenne with a sigh.

Cheyenne shrugs. “Does it matter?”

She’s right, it shouldn’t. But it does to me.

I grab the swimming cap from her roughly and scrunch it up into a ball.

“Yes,” I reply.

Cheyenne hesitates for a moment, then pulls it from my clenched fist. “I don’t know why you let what other people think bother you so much,” she says, smoothing it out. She reaches toward me, the cap resting between her small fingers. “We don’t need to fit in.”

But I do, I want to scream. I need to feel like I belong somewhere.

I don’t though. Instead, I push the frustration back down to join all the other feelings I’m not allowed to have, like curiosity about my father and happiness at school. And the scariest one of all… hope that things will be different.

“Look,” says Cheyenne after a short pause. “It’s my birthday, and your mum finally let you do something other than go to church. I’m not letting you waste it by acting moist in here.”

My eyebrows lift at her tone, but she’s right, and I don’t want to mess up her special day. I snatch the ugly cap from her.

“You’re the one who’s moist,” I reply with a small smile.

“Sorry,” Cheyenne shoots right back. “I can’t hear you past your mushroom head.”

About The Author

Photograph (c) Dujonna Gift-Simms

Tolá Okogwu is a British Nigerian author, journalist, and hair care educator. Born in Nigeria but raised in London, she holds a Bachelor of Arts degree in journalism. Having spent several years exploring the world of blogging, haircare, and freelance writing, she finally returned to her first love: fiction. She is the author of the Onyeka middle grade series, the self-published picture book series Daddy Do My Hair, and Aziza’s Secret Fairy Door under the name Lola Morayo. Tolá lives in Kent, England, with her husband and two daughters. An avid reader and lover of music, she’s also a sucker for melted cheese. Learn more at TolaOkogwu.com.

Why We Love It

“There are a million reasons to fall for this high-spirited adventure, from the exciting magic and technology it showcases to Onyeka’s compelling journey to find empowerment through her relationship with her hair.”

—Kate P, Editor, on Onyeka and the Academy of the Sun

Product Details

  • Publisher: Margaret K. McElderry Books (June 14, 2022)
  • Length: 320 pages
  • ISBN13: 9781665912617
  • Grades: 3 - 7
  • Ages: 8 - 12
  • Lexile ® 710L The Lexile reading levels have been certified by the Lexile developer, MetaMetrics®

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Raves and Reviews

“An empowering blend of action and mystery, featuring superpowered showdowns, lovable characters, and jaw-dropping twists. Kept me flying through the pages!”

– Xiran Jay Zhao, New York Times bestselling author of Zachary Ying and the Dragon Emperor

“Onyeka is the empowered and electric heroine we’ve been waiting for. Perfect for fans of Marvel and magic.”

– Alex Aster, New York Times bestselling author of the Emblem Island series

"Onyeka is a force: a bold, courageous, and whipsmart protagonist for a new paradigm. Okogwu crafts a world where kids like Onyeka can really find their voice in this must-read debut fantasy."

– Louisa Onomé, author of Like Home and Twice As Perfect

"Fast-paced, action-packed and empowering. Tolá Okogwu’s storytelling shines so bright you’ll want the next instalment immediately."

– A. F. Steadman, New York Times bestselling author of Skandar and the Unicorn Thief

"A delightful blend of adventure, heart, and Afrofuturism."

– Kirkus Reviews

"Okogwu has created an exciting fantasy with Nigerian culture and customs woven into the plot to create excellent world building with interesting characters. A story of a young girl’s journey to self-acceptance, this title will leave readers on the edge of their seats in anticipation for the next part in this new series."

– Booklist

"In Okogwu’s vividly created Nigerian world, technology and an exploration of emotional internality interplay with a child’s literalized relationship with her hair, making for an enjoyable X-Men-leaning series starter."

– Publishers Weekly

"Excitement and adventure abound, it's the book I would've wished for as a kid."

– Namina Forna, New York Times bestselling author of The Gilded Ones

Awards and Honors

  • School Library Journal Best Books of the Year
  • Kansas NEA Reading Circle List Intermediate Title
  • SLJ Best Book of the Year
  • Black-Eyed Susan Book Award Nominee (MD)
  • Georgia Children's Book Award Finalist
  • ALA Notable Children's Recording
  • Children's Africana Book Award

Resources and Downloads

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More books from this author: Tolá Okogwu

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