Author:Adeline Yen Mah,Ngadi Smart
Rebel Voices: Disruptive Stories from Trailblazing Women - a new Puffin Classics collection, celebrating International Women's Day 2023
To me, writing was pure pleasure. It thrilled me to be able to escape the horrors of my daily life in such a simple way. When I wrote, I forgot that I was the unwanted daughter who caused her mother's death. I could be anybody I wished to be.
When her mother dies shortly after her birth, lonely Adeline is marked as 'bad luck' and treated as an outcast by her own family, shown kindness only by her grandfather and Aunt Baba who encourage her to follow her dreams.
Adeline strives to win her father's acceptance by excelling in school, but instead discovers an escape in the friendships of her classmates and her talent for writing. For the first time Adeline allows herself to dream of a real future as a writer and yearns to study in England with her brother - but it is a future she will have to fight with every ounce of strength she has to achieve.
Chinese Cinderella is Adeline Yen Mah's true story of survival and self-acceptance during her childhood as an unwanted daughter, and how she overcame her past to believe in a better future.
Rebel Voices is a new six-part Puffin Classics collection of strikingly designed, highly collectible books, written by female authors, and celebrating courage, rebellion, strength and inspiration
The author recreates moments of cruelty and victory so convincingly that readers will feel almost as if they're in the same room with her.
—— Publishers WeeklySet against the dreamy backdrop of 1970s Santa Monica, Clouds over California is a touching story about the difficulties of accepting change and the importance of being true to yourself. I absolutely loved spending time in Stevie's world.
—— Brandy Colbert, award-winning author of The Only Black Girls in TownClouds over California is a taste of history with the thrills of mystery and brims with family secrets. Karyn Parsons created a sweet, heartfelt story filled with curiosity and hope.
—— Alicia D. Williams, award-winning author of Genesis Begins AgainOne of the best stories I've read in a long while
—— Emma Carroll, author of Letters from the Lighthouse[An] exquisite book... a deeply affecting, wholly unsolemn treatment of some of the 20th century's darkest moments.
—— Daily MailThe prowess of his storytelling makes him a graceful guide through "the great world of the past"... Cunningly crafted, Faulks's fictional bridge between the French past and present has its sentimental side.
—— Financial TimesThere is humour and humanity in this bold, perceptive novel.
—— Daily ExpressBoth thoughtful and thought-provoking with memorable characters and a profound sense of the past in the present
—— Hannah Beckerman , S Magazine, Sunday ExpressHere is Paris in all its beauty and squalor, its blood-stained history and its ability to instil in its lover a sense of the true sweetness of life. So this intelligent, moving, often disturbing novel is also really a love letter to Paris and indeed to France.
—— The ScotsmanThere is much to learn from Paris Echo about the city’s complex identity, and about the way we view the past.
—— Sunday TimesParis Echo tackles its subjects – war, identity, colonial legacies – with the skill and emotional power that have delighted his readers for three decades
—— Max Liu , i paperFaulks is a fine descriptive writer and evokes Paris splendidly
—— Daily TelegraphParis Echo is an enjoyable and highly readable novel. Faulks has an easy-going style and he draws you seemingly without effort into the world he creates. He has a knowing humour too…In part the novel is a love letter to Paris, but it is also the latest product of Faulk’s long-standing and fascinating engagement with the devastating events of the 20th century.
—— Literary ReviewThis intelligent, moving, often disturbing novel is also really a love letter to Paris – and, indeed, to France
—— i paperFaulks excels at creating well-rounded characters.
—— Good HousekeepingAn intriguing guide to the many layers of Parisien life.
—— Anthony Gardner , Mail on SundayMaster storytelling... [An] intriguing and moving story that shows how the future is shaped by the past.
—— Women & Home‘Paris Echo is an enjoyable and highly readable novel. Faulks has an easy-going style and he draws you seemingly without effort into the world he creates. He has a knowing humour too…In part the novel is a love letter to Paris, but it is also the latest product of Faulk’s long-standing and fascinating engagement with the devastating events of the 20th century.’
—— Literary ReviewImmersive
—— The SpectatorA lovely novel by a writer who lives and breathes France
—— Saga MagazineFaulks masterfully reminds readers of the city’s indecipherable mystique and bottomless artistic generosity
—— The Culture Trip‘[a} stimulating novel’
—— Country & Town HouseAnother terrific, intelligent read from Faulks
—— Reader's Digest