Onjali Q. Rauf (Author) Onjali Q Rauf's first book, The Boy at the Back of the Class, was Winner of the Waterstones Children's Book Prize in 2019, the Blue Peter Book Prize 2019 and other accolades.Rauf's second book, The Star Outside My Window, went on to win the Diversity Book Award for Children's Fiction (UK) 2020. Further titles include The Night Bus Hero, The Great Food Bank Heist, The Lion Above the Door, Where Magic Grows and Hope on the Horizon.In 2022, Rauf was recognised for her services to Literature and Women's Rights in the New Year Honours.Pippa Curnick (Illustrator) Pippa Curnick grew up in rural Essex and studied at Camberwell College of Art. She graduated from the University of Derby with a First Class degree in illustration. Pippa's picture book Lucie Goose was shortlisted for the Evening Standard's Oscar's First Book Prize. Her website is www.pippacurnick.com and you can follow her on Insta @pippa_curnick and on Twitter @PippaCurnick
Raul's book is at once tearjerking and chuckle-inducing and will go
a long way to restore faith in human nature.
*Sunday Post*
Onjali Raúf's debut, The Boy at the Back of the Class (Orion),
illustrated by Pippa Curnick, offers a child's eye view and an
ambitious, adventure-filled plot. When a new boy is introduced at
school, no one is exactly sure where he has come from; what is a
"refugee kid", anyway, and how can Ahmet be helped to feel that he
belongs? Though the narrator's voice is overly young at times, this
is a lovely, warm-hearted first novel, a celebration of courage and
friendship leavened with mischief.
*The Guardian*
Rauf's touching debut could hardly be more topical. Syrian refugee
Ahmet is struggling to adapt to his new life in London, until our
nine-year-old narrator and friends come up with a very clever plan
to reunite him with his lost family. Utterly delightful, Rauf's
book centres on the importance of friendship and encourages
children not to fear those who are different'.
*The Mail On Sunday*
Bravely tackling the difficult issue of refugees, The Boy At The
Back of The Class is about a Syrian refugee arriving in a class in
the UK that shows us how children can sometimes get it so much
better than adults.
*Angels & Urchins*
This is a powerful story about friendship and kindness.
*Family Traveller*
This book's greatest strength is how it conveys the motive nature
of its main theme (the refugee crisis) in a way that opens up
conversations instead of shutting them down. 'The Boy At The Back
of The Class' is not only a well-written book that begs the reader
to keep reading, but also one that opens up a dialogue that we need
to be having with our young people.
*TES*
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