On September 7, I moderated a conversation between Sheree Renée Thomas, author of Black Panther: Panther's Rage (2025) and Suyi Davies Okungbowa who wrote Marvel: Black Panther: The Intergalactic Empire of Wakanda (2025). Both writers also contributed to Black Panther: Tales of Wakanda (2022), edited by Jesse J. Holland.
I’m especially grateful to Efe Paul-Azino, the festival’s director, for making this conversation possible by inviting Thomas and Okungbowa. I had suggested to him that Black Panther represents a vital site of African American and African creativity and aesthetics. I floated the idea of a panel and panelists in a hopeful, open-ended way, citing the recent novelizations of Black Panther comics as a model. I was pleased when he secured commitments from both authors.
Our discussion covered wide-ranging territory. We explored how each writer incorporated cultural signifiers into their work and how they extended and reimagined aspects of the Black Panther storylines. They spoke openly about the experience of working on a Marvel property.
They also reflected on their career trajectories and highlighted a range of speculative writers across the Black diaspora, situating their own contributions within a much larger continuum of creativity.
The conversation flowed so well that at one point I asked why we haven’t seen more of these exchanges such as African American and Nigerian authors discussing the intersections of their work in public forums.
They cited a range of challenges, including language, geography, cultural distance, and more. Yet gatherings like this festival show that we have genuine opportunities to bring seemingly far-flung people and ideas together.
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