Afromantasy™
Afromantasy Tales™
Where Myth Dares to Dream — A New Lore for a Stolen Future
Afromantasy is shaped by cosmology, by the precision of mythic law, and by the belief that imaginative work can perform cultural repair. Each tale functions as both story and corrective, restoring knowledge systems fractured by conquest and dispersal. It invites the reader into a mythic cartography where the spiritual, the ecological, and the political coexist without hierarchy. It offers a field of vision where African antiquity is treated not as artifact but as architecture, a living framework from which entirely new dream-realms can be built. These stories reassert Africa as a generator of universal myth, not a footnote to someone else’s canon.




Nwaotito's Adventures
Exploring Nwaotito's adventures in the place of Pulsinor and the light tree, as we see the fallout of a deity's answering of a prayer at the shrine of another.
The Magic Weavers of the Adire Loom
The Magic Weavers of Adire is an intriguing story in the canon of the Magic Codex.




The Wondrous Inhabitors of the Canopy of Jewels
Our architecture services prioritise function and form to create spaces that stand the test of time.
The Adventures of the African Queens
Based on the true exploits of Africa' luminous Queens, this series will explore the place, personality and times of Africa's Queens.




Core Works Include:
• The Canopy of Jewels – an enchanted forest saga where design is divine, and nature wears its own memory in gold
• The Relikas – new consequence deities formed in the wake of rupture, mythic beings born of absence, pressure, and need
• The Return of Lord Sennan – an epic of light magic, betrayal, and re-forged loyalty
• Nature Wears Adornment – a lyrical world where every tree is a keeper of memory and every blossom a bearer of code
• The Shadow Canopy – where oracles speak in moss and fugitives carve freedom through vine and shadow.
Afromantasy is a genre of reclamation. It builds bridges between the Afrodeities Codex™ and future myth. It dares to ask:
What would Africa have dreamed if it had never been interrupted?
And:
What can we dream now, with the memory that remains?
It invites the world to consider that the future is not invented from nothing but assembled from the fragments of stolen possibility — and that myth, in the right hands, can be a form of return.
Reframing African History by Reclaiming African Mythology
Restoring African mythology through innovative storytelling.
chinenye@chinenye.co.uk
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