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Solaris to publish Sign Here by Claudia Lux for the UK

Solaris is thrilled to announce the acquisition of Sign Here by Claudia Lux for the UK, a horror comedy set to be developed into a series by Amazon with Phoebe Waller-Bridge executive producing.

Peyote Trip works in Hell. Literally. He’s on the cusp of a big promotion if only he can get one more member of the wealthy Harrison family to sell their soul. But things aren’t always as they seem, on Earth or in Hell. And as old secrets and new dangers scrape away at the Harrisons’ shiny surface, revealing the darkness beneath, everyone must face the consequences of their choices.

Sign Here will be released in September 2023.

UK/BC English Language Rights were acquired by Amy Borsuk from Tawanna Sullivan at Berkley, PRH.

Claudia Lux on the acquisition:

“I am so excited to partner with Solaris to bring Sign Here to the UK! As a self-professed anglophile, it is an honor to join such a great list of authors and work with Amy and the whole Solaris team. Can’t wait to see you all in hell!”

Editor Amy Borsuk:

“I’m delighted to bring Sign Here to UK audiences, ahead of its adaptation into a TV show! This book is parts hilarious, moving, thrilling and tragic—UK readers are in for a wild and exciting ride!”

Claudia Lux is a graduate of Sarah Lawrence College, and has a master’s in social work from the University of Texas at Austin. She lives and works in Boston, Massachusetts. Sign Here is her first novel.

For press enquiries please contact Jess Gofton, PR & Marketing Manager: jess.gofton@rebellion.co.uk.

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Revealing the cover for If Found, Return to Hell by Em X. Liu!

Today we’re so excited to begin our #HalfwaytoHalloween celebration by revealing the cover of our second 2023 Solaris Satellites novella, If Found, Return to Hell by Em X. Liu!

Journeyman Wen’s internship at One Wizard takes a sinister turn when their client is possessed by a demon prince from Hell…

If Found, Return to Hell is out this June!

Being an intern at One Wizard sounds magical on the page, but in practice mostly means getting yelled at by senior mages and angry clients who’ve been turned into platypuses alike. So when Journeyman Wen receives a frantic call from a young man who’s awoken to a talisman on his bedroom wall and no memory of how it got there, they jump at the chance to escape call center duty and actually help someone for once.

But the case ends up being more complicated than Wen could ever have anticipated. Their client has been possessed by a demon prince from Hell, and he’s not interested in leaving…

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Solaris to publish debut novella by Em X. Liu

Solaris is thrilled to announce the acquisition of If Found, Return to Hell by Em X. Liu, the second of the 2023 Solaris Satellites novellas, to be published in June 2023.

Being an intern at One Wizard sounds magical on the page, but in practice mostly means getting yelled at by senior mages and angry clients alike. And so, after receiving a frantic call from a young man who’s awoken to a talisman on his bedroom wall—and no memory of how it got there—Journeyman Wen jumps at the chance to escape call-center duty and actually help someone for once.

But the case ends up being more complicated than Wen could ever have anticipated. The client has been possessed by a demon prince from Hell, and he’s not interested in leaving.

World English Language Rights were acquired by David Moore from Penelope Burns at Gelfman Schneider.

Author Em X. Liu on the acquisition:

“If Found, Return to Hell is an attempt to rediscover the magic in mundanity: carving out satisfaction in your work, how to balance a helping instinct with your own happiness, living with the guilt of not calling your mom for weeks, a warm meal, friends that turn into family, etc. I am so excited to bring it to you with the help of the Solaris Satellites program; I hope it will be the perfect size to dig into, but not too hearty—a nourishing meal in these trying times.”

Acquiring Editor David Moore:

“Em could hardly have found a more susceptible editor! As an immigrant myself I delighted in the found family storyline, and as a parent I ached with the impulse to protect someone a little bit helpless; but the frustration and tedium of the call centre? That I felt right in the bottom of my crusty old Gen-X soul. If Found, Return to Hell is strange, lovely, incredibly humane and utterly delightful.”

Em X. Liu is a writer and recent biochemistry graduate, which means they love stories about artificial intelligence and Shakespeare in equal measure. Since immigrating to Canada, they never go long without hopping on a plane to wander new places. But out of all the cities they’ve been to, they still love their home in Toronto the most. Their debut novel, The Death I Gave Him, will be published by Solaris in September 2023.

For press enquiries please contact Jess Gofton, PR & Marketing Manager: jess.gofton@rebellion.co.uk

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Romance recommendations from the Rebellion team!

Happy Valentine’s Day!

Whether you’re loved up, mourning a relationship that’s ended or just looking forward to tomorrow when all the Valentine’s chocolate will be on sale, we the Rebellion team want to share some of our favourite literary romances with you—just in case you’re looking for something book-shaped to curl up with…

Amanda Rutter, Commissioning Editor | Kushiel’s Dart by Jacqueline Carey

The romance between Phèdre nó Delaunay and Joscelin Verreuil is a slow burn, escapees-to-lovers, forbidden affair, and it took my breath away the first time I read it—indeed, every time I read it! What I found masterful about Carey’s writing was that, no matter Phèdre’s affairs with others or her role as a courtesan, it felt as though she would only fit with Joscelin, that his was the only soul that truly matched hers. And the other romantic element of this novel that bowled me over was the freedom, respect and gentleness of ‘Love As Thou Wilt’, a central concept of the whole series. Love is celebrated in whatever form it comes.

Amy Borsuk, Editor | Juniper and Thorn by Ava Reid

Even though it’s a horror novel, there’s a heartfelt romance at the centre of this story. Witch Marlinchen falls in love with the prima ballerina Sevas after sneaking out of her father’s creepy, decrepit home and seeing him at the opera. I’m so used to the gorgeous male love interest turning out to be the monster, the source of the woman protagonist’s downfall, particularly in horror/fantasy novels. So it was refreshing to have the romance be the protagonist’s source of safety and salvation! Their shared bond, and their wild passion, make for an exhilarating read in the midst of a very dark story.

Ben Smith, Head of Film, TV & Publishing | The Spare Man by Mary Robinette Kowal

Good romance is hard to do, and mainstream science fiction spent a long time trying to avoid it. Happily in the present day we’re in a golden age for genre romance. One of my favourite authors writing about relationships now is Mary Robinette Kowal, because she tells stories not of romance being found between two strangers, but romance being an ongoing well-spring for her couples. In both The Calculating Stars and The Spare Man, she has couples who have already gotten together before the book begins, and whose relationships are into the ‘ever after’ part of the story that few care to write. That she makes the romance real and vital is wonderful to read, and is possibly even more inspiring than any meet-cute about the first flush of romance.

Casey Davoren, Senior Digital Marketing & Social Media Executive | Love & Gelato by Jenna Evans Welch

This book is wonderfully enamoured with hope, love and every other cute, light-hearted feeling one can come up with. But most importantly, it’s a tale about strength and healing, about enduring despite everything that life throws your way. That no matter how many heartbreaks or failures you endure, no matter how many of those moments-that-will-blow-your-composure exist or how many times you’re thrown off balance, they’ll soon evaporate and things will move in a better direction. Love & Gelato has so much charm, heart and romance at its core that I flew through the book.

Jess Gofton, PR and Marketing Manager – Fiction and Non Fiction | Delilah Green Doesn’t Care by Ashley Herring Blake

As cliché as it is, I’m a sucker for a romance starring someone who has to return to the small town they grew up in. When I’m feeling slumpy or a bit down I can always count on a contemporary romance to cheer me up, and this book is one of so many sapphic romances now available for readers to dive into. I love the relationship between Delilah and Claire, but I also love the wider relationships this novel explores, from Delilah’s prickly interactions with her stepfamily to Claire’s determination to prevent her unreliable ex from breaking their daughter’s heart. Definitely one to consider picking up as we head into spring!

Olivia Hicks, Graphic Novel Editor | Jem and The Holograms by Kelly Thompson and Sophie Campbell

An oldie but a goldie. One of the greatest comics gems and possibly the greatest comic book adaptation ever? If you’re into romance comics, then Jem and the Holograms is a landmark series. This is the editorial team that launched Kelly Thompson as a mainstream name, gave us gag-worthy visuals from Sophie Campbell, and provided early comics work for the now legendary Jen Bartel and Yoshi Yoshitani, among others. Alongside all of the truly outrageous fashions, songs and high stakes drama that is familiar to fans of the original 1980s tv show, this comic had a truly delightful queer romance develop between Stormer and Kimber (they’re members of rival bands! They couldn’t possibly!), just for those of us who have shipped those two since the “Kimber Goes Solo” episode. It’s just a nonstop super sweet ride, coloured perfectly by Victoria M. Robado, and you can find it all in the first two volumes of the series.

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Meet the contributors to Sinophagia!

Earlier this year we were so excited to share the news that we’re publishing an anthology of horror from China in Spring 2024. Edited and translated by Xueting C. Ni, who also edited and translated the British Fantasy Award-winning collection Sinopticon: A Celebration of Chinese Science Fiction, Sinophagia will translate 14 horror stories from China into English for the very first time.

Today we’re delighted to introduce you to all 14 contributors!

Yimei Tangguo

“A Piece of Candy,” or “Poison Candy” to her readers, is a renowned suspense writer, attracting millions of dedicated fans. Her sharp writing style, and alluring plotlines, have cemented her place as China’s unshakable queen of horror.

Cai Jun

Author, screenwriter, and committee member of the China Writer’s Association, Cai Jun has published about thirty novels, many short stories, and has won multiple awards including the Liang Yusheng Award for Outstanding Contribution and the Hundred Flowers Literature Award.

Chi Hui

The former deputy chief editor of Science Fiction World, Chi Hui has published almost a dozen sci-fi and fantasy novels, and has earned such accolades as the Galaxy, Nebula and Coordinate awards. Her short works are available in English on Clarkesworld, and Apex magazines.

Chu Xidao

A member of the Shanghai Writer’s Association and ex-creative director to an advertising company, Chu Xidao now works mainly on novel and screen writing, with great acclaim for her series Demon Born. She was also head script writer for the C-Drama Warrior of Destiny.

Chuan Ge

A self-professed “story grave-digger,” Chuan Ge is a suspense writer famous for his short form suspense and deduction fiction, managing to create high tension in an exceptionally short space of time.

Fan Zhou

As a new writer, with a very serious day job, Fan Zhou spends her spare time writing in secret about the type of conspiracy, corpses and crime she wishes she could banish purely to the pages of fiction.

Goodnight Xiaoqing

Goodnight Xiaoqing is one of the “hot authors” jointly endorsed by almost all China’s major online publishing platforms, with millions of followers calling themselves “The Qing Clan.” Her books include The Imprisoned Fox, The Avenger’s Song and Ghostly Fragrance.

Zhou Haohui

Suspense author, screen writer and cutting-edge director, Zhou Haohui is most known as the creator of the Death Notice franchise, China’s hottest suspense drama, whose live action adaption drew a 100 million views within days of its release.

Gu Shi

An urban planner by day, a speculative fiction writer by night, Gu Shi’s short fiction works have won two Galaxy Awards and three Chinese Nebula Awards. Her stories have been translated into English, published in Clarkesworld, Xprize’s Sci-fi Ocean Anthology and Sinopticon.

She Cong Ge

The pen name of Xu Yufeng, She Cong Ge published his first supernatural horror, Ghost Stories of Yichang, in 2010, and shot to fame online. He quit his day job in 2013 to help in adapting his books Snake City and The Secret Tunnel for TV and film.

Su Min

A sci-fi and screen writer, Su Min’s signature works have won reader voted awards at both the 2019 Chinese Sci-Fi Gala, and the 2020 Gravity Award for Best Short Fiction, whilst The Reconciliation won a “Youth Star” from the China Science and Science Fiction Association.

Hong Niangzi

Hong Niangzi, “The Red Lady,” has written 16 novels, including her Seven Colour Horrors series. Her flair and dynamic style have earned her the title “The Empress of Horror.” Published in Italy, Korea, and Vietnam, this is the first time her work will be available in English.

Zhou Dedong

Considered China’s “godfather of suspense fiction”, Zhou Dedong has been editor-in-chief of Youth, Friends and Motto magazines, and has published almost a dozen books, which have been translated across the world .

Nanpai Sanshu

Nanpai Sanshu, (“Third Uncle of the Southern Sect”), is the pseudonym of Xu Lei. One of the founding figures of China’s tomb raiding genre, his signature work, The Graverobber Chronicles, launched a multi-award winning, multi-media experience covering film, TV, comics and games.

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Spooky season book recommendations from the Rebellion team!

It’s spooky season, and spooky season means spooky books! Here’s what the Rebellion team recommends you try this Halloween…

Amy Borsuk, Editor | Bunny by Mona Awad

You wouldn’t know it from the name, or the bright pink-orange book cover, but Bunny is as fun as it is spooky. A satire of books like The Secret History and with the similar feminist attitude of Mean Girls, Bunny follows MFA student Samantha as she navigates her way through the cult-like clique of rich white women on her programme – but not before she gets sucked into it herself. What follows is an eerie tangle of actual cultist rituals including bunny sacrifices and axe-murdering, women friendships with no boundaries or individuality, and lots of drugs. Eventually Sam doesn’t know what’s real and what’s not, nor how she can escape their clutches. It’s a fun, fast, and easy read. For once I saw the twist coming, but I still enjoyed the ride!

Ben Smith, Head of Film, TV & Publishing | The Turn of the Screw by Henry James

A ghost watching from the end of the garden, an unsettling and precocious child who knows more than they should, an untrustworthy narrator. All these ingredients and more were mixed together by the most unlikely source in the nineteenth century. Penned, not by a writer of grand guignol like Edgar Alan Poe, nor an adventure writer like Robert Louis Stevenson, but by Henry James, an American Anglophile whose novels of manners featuring wealthy Americans in Europe were investigations into the consciousness of his characters. And the novella, unlike any major work he wrote before or after, was The Turn of the Screw. Distilling decades of preoccupation about how what one feels inside can be at odds with what is happening around us, James created an inexperienced governess at sea in a house of hidden histories, obsessions and malicious spirits. On first read the novel terrifies, as we feel for the governess. The second time around however, you start to worry about everything she does.

Casey Davoren, Senior Digital Marketing & Social Media Executive | Bleeding Violet by Dia Reeves

Bleeding Violet is about a girl named Hanna who is a little . . . crazy. Certifiably. Which makes this a unique perspective on the teenage mind. I’m still a sucker for the girl meets boy at school and something is different about him and/or where they live trope. I thought this was going to be one of those, but it wasn’t. Hanna is eccentric, like a stray flower floating through the air. She meets Wyatt who likes her, no matter her manic depression and hallucinations, and because of those hallucinations, the monsters, creatures, and creepy-crawlies of Portero, TX are nothing new. In fact, they’re exciting because they’re actually real.

Chiara Mestieri, Editorial Assistant | Rosemary’s Baby by Ira Levin

The ultimate ‘trust no one’ novel, Rosemary’s Baby builds a chilling, claustrophobic narrative in which the mystery unravels alongside the mind of its protagonist, and the spread of horror seems inescapable; not confined to a manor house in the woods, but infiltrating every corner of the city, hiding behind every friendly face. What’s terrifying about it is not the idea of an unspeakable, supernatural evil waiting in the wings, but the fact that it is ushered in by very real people. It’s a clever dissection of society at a fractured time, and a deeply unsettling read.

David Moore, Editor | The Atrocity Archives by Charles Stross

The Laundry books worked their way around my friends for quite a while before I finally settled down to reading them (I actually GMed my first Laundry Files roleplaying game before I read my first Laundry book), but when I did I was hooked. Smart, funny, geeky, weird, and profoundly British (in a way that absolutely engages with our flaws as a culture), The Atrocity Archives is equal parts cosmic horror, office comedy and espionage novel. Bob is a bit of a cypher – a harried office worker/computer nerd with a fairly neutral voice – but that serves him well as a first-person narrator, allowing the wealth of brilliant supporting characters to shine through. The book cracks along at a good pace, the world’s brilliantly inventive, the story’s engaging, and this first novel especially is deeply unsettling (with content warnings especially for references to the Holocaust). Great stuff.

Gemma Sheldrake, Graphic Designer | The Year of the Witching by Alexis Henderson

I recently just finished this brilliant folk horror about a young woman in a deeply religious society who discovers she has dark powers. She must combat the evil lure of the surrounding forest and the Holy Protocol to protect herself and stop the encroaching curses. It’s got strong vibes of The VVitch and The Handmaid’s Tale and is brimming with creeping suspense. Perfect for this season!

Jess Gofton, PR and Marketing Manager – Fiction and Non Fiction | The Hunger by Alma Katsu

Historical reimaginings can be hit-or-miss for me, especially when the true story they’re dealing with is already dark, but Katsu’s horror retelling of the Donner Party captivated me and encouraged me to learn more about the very real history. While The Hunger is nothing ground-breaking as far as horror goes—a group of people slowly turning on one another as some kind of supernatural force starts picking them off one by one is well-trodden ground—her characters are so well drawn that I spent the whole book on the edge of my seat. The audiobook narrated by Kirsten Potter is a fantastic listen as the nights draw in!

Matt Smith, Editor | The Black Dahlia by James Ellroy

The Black Dahlia isn’t horror in the traditional sense but is one of the most haunting books I’ve ever read, and it was my gateway into Ellroy’s obsessional, dark crime novels. A young woman’s mutilated body is discovered dumped in 1950s Los Angeles, and it kickstarts an investigation that will consume the young cop who delves into the life of the victim, Elizabeth Short. Ellroy’s own mother was murdered when he was a kid, and found in similar circumstances, so that feeds into the driven, confessional narrative, and the tragic spirit of Beth Short stays with you long after the final page.

Michael Molcher, 2000AD Brand Manager | The Haunting of Hill House by Shirley Jackson

Yes, it’s the classic haunted house novel, but some would say it is also the greatest. I would be one of them. Jackson’s work isn’t just scary, it’s profoundly unsettling; it stays with you long after you’ve finished reading, because the book isn’t really about the ghosts that haunt the house, but the ghosts that haunt its temporary occupants. And, ultimately, its opening paragraph remains one of the best first pages that English literature has ever produced.

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OUT NOW: The Dark Between the Trees by Fiona Barnett

We’re so excited to be wishing The Dark Between the Trees by Fiona Barnett a very happy book birthday!

This dual timeline tale of lost soldiers, frightened academics and the stories men will tell one another to cast women and girls as witches is the perfect read for fans of The Ritual, The Descent and The Blair Witch Project.

Good news, UK readers, you only have to wait two more days! (And if you’re in Edinburgh, come and join us for the launch!)

1643: A small group of Parliamentarian soldiers are ambushed in an isolated part of Northern England. Their only hope for survival is to flee into the nearby Moresby Wood… unwise though that may seem. For Moresby Wood is known to be an unnatural place, the realm of witchcraft and shadows, where the devil is said to go walking by moonlight…

Seventeen men enter the wood. Only two are ever seen again, and the stories they tell of what happened make no sense. Stories of shifting landscapes, of trees that appear and disappear at will… and of something else. Something dark. Something hungry.

Today, five women are headed into Moresby Wood to discover, once and for all, what happened to that unfortunate group of soldiers. Led by Dr Alice Christopher, an historian who has devoted her entire academic career to uncovering the secrets of Moresby Wood. Armed with metal detectors, GPS units, mobile phones and the most recent map of the area (which is nearly 50 years old), Dr Christopher’s group enters the wood ready for anything.

Or so they think.

“Blimey, this was creepy as hell!” — Claire North, author of Ithaca

“Haunting and heart-stopping. The Dark Between the Trees marks the arrival of a bold new voice in British horror.” — MR Carey, author of The Girl with All the Gifts

“Surreal and haunting” – Booklist

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OUT NOW: The Immortality Thief by Taran Hunt

Happy book birthday to the fantastic The Immortality Thief by Taran Hunt!

Indiana Jones meets Event Horizon in this spooky and adventurous sci-fi tale of linguistics, abandoned spaceships, monsters and found family.

Don’t worry UK readers, you only have to wait until Thursday to get your hands on it!

Far off the edge of human existence, beside a dying star lies a nameless ship abandoned and hidden, lost for a millennium. But there are secrets there, terrible secrets that would change the fate of humanity, and eventually someone will come looking.

Refugee, criminal and linguist Sean Wren is made an offer he knows he can’t refuse: life in prison, “voluntary” military service – or salvaging data in a long-dead language from an abandoned ship filled with traps and monsters, just days before it’s destroyed in a supernova. Data connected to the Philosopher’s Stone experiments, into unlocking the secrets of immortality.

And he’s not the only one looking for the derelict ship. The Ministers, mysterious undying aliens that have ruled over humanity for centuries, want the data – as does The Republic, humanity’s last free government. And time is running out.

In the bowels of the derelict ship, surrounded by horrors and dead men, Sean slowly uncovers the truth of what happened on the ship, in its final days… and the terrible secret it’s hiding.

“Fun, resonant and compulsively readable” — Veronica Roth

“Fun, fast-paced, cutting-edge, and full of epic twists” — Library Journal, starred review

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Announcing the first contributors of Sinophagia!

Following the success of the British Fantasy Award-nominated anthology, Sinopticon, we were delighted to announce the acquisition of Sinophagia!

This anthology of Chinese horror, edited and translated by Xueting C. Ni, will be released in 2024, and we’re thrilled to share the first of the contributors with you today…

Cai Jun
Chi Hui
Chu Xidao
Chuan Ge
Fan Zhou
Goodnight Xiaoqing
Gu Shi

Hong Niangzi
She Cong Ge
Su Min
Yimei Tangguo
Zhou Dedong
Zhou Haohui

Keep your eyes peeled for more news about the forthcoming anthology as we approach the spookiest time of the year!

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Solaris to publish Chinese horror anthology from Xueting C. Ni

Solaris is delighted to announce Sinophagia from editor and translator Xueting C. Ni, to be published in Spring 2024.

A sister to Ni’s British Fantasy Award-nominated anthology, Sinopticon: A Celebration of Chinese Science Fiction, Sinophagia collects 14 dazzling tales of contemporary Chinese horror that have been translated into English for the very first time.

World English Rights were acquired by Michael Rowley.

Xueting C. Ni on the anthology:

“I’m very excited to bring be able to bring out this anthology with many masters of Chinese horror, this collection has been carefully curated, to go beyond people’s expectations, of hopping vampires, and hanging ghosts, and whilst I think it’s a fascinating insight into the psyche of modern China, I hope my readers will also find it, absolutely spine chilling.

There has never been a collection like this before, and as with Sinopticon, I have selected a wide range of voices, from China’s most well-known creepy story tellers to bold upcoming writers with a sense of urban horror.”

Editor Michael Rowley:

“Sinophagia, like Sinopticon before it, is a hugely exciting project that will push the boundaries of Western understanding and appreciation of Chinese genre fiction; a world Xueting has unparalleled insight into as an anthologist, editor, and translator. I couldn’t be more excited to be working with her again on such a ground-breaking collection.”

Xueting C. Ni was born in Guangzhou, during China’s “re-opening to the West”. Having lived in cities across China, she emigrated with her family to Britain at the age of 11, where she continued to be immersed in Chinese culture, alongside her British education, realising ultimately that this gave her a unique a cultural perspective, bridging her Eastern and Western experiences. After graduating in English Literature from the University of London, she began a career in the publishing industry, whilst also translating original works of Chinese fiction. She returned to China in 2008 to continue her research at Central University of Nationalities, Beijing. Since 2010, Xueting has written extensively on Chinese culture and China’s place in Western pop media, working with companies, institutions and festivals, to help improve understanding of China’s heritage, culture and innovation, and introduce its wonders to new audiences. Xueting has contributed to the BBC, Tordotcom and the Guangdong Art Academy. She has created non-fiction works, including From Kuanyin to Chairman Mao (Weiser Books) and curated fiction in translation, including Sinopticon: A Celebration of Chinese Science Fiction (Solaris). Xueting is currently working on new books of non-fiction and on bringing more outstanding contemporary Chinese fiction to Anglophone audiences. She lives just outside London with her partner and their cats, all of whom are learning Chinese.

For press enquiries please contact Jess Gofton, PR & Marketing Manager: jess.gofton@rebellion.co.uk.