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A young woman’s adventure in 1937 Manchukuo.

JUNE | Fiction
$12 Paperback
ISBN: 1-56947-424-9
All Rights: Soho Press
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"Catches the sights, smells,
sounds and tastes of Hong Kong, China and Manchuria in 1937 as they filter
through the senses of a fascinating young woman.... Under the amazingly sure
hand of Petit, an Australian writer of rare abilities, every aspect of this
terrific story comes to life."
—Chicago Tribune |
“With a dramatic sense of
time and place, Caroline Petit has woven a story as intricate as embroidered
Chinese silk. She blends a tragic period in Asian history with the extraordinary
journey of Leah Kolbe, a compelling character who is perfect for Petit’s
late 1930s Hong Kong.”
—Jacqueline
Winspear, author of Maisie Dobbs, Birds of a Feather, and Pardonable Lies |
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Hong Kong, 1937. Orphaned by the sudden death of her father, a shady Hong Kong dealer in antiquities, nineteen-year-old Leah Kolbe finds she has been left penniless. Her only assets are the skills her father taught her: connoisseurship, secretiveness and duplicity.
She is approached by a Mr. Chang, who claims to have known her father and offers her a commission to go to Manchukuo (the Japanese puppet kingdom recently established in Manchuria) to smuggle out Chinese Imperial treasures. She consents and, accompanied by her faithful amah and a White Russian woman in Chang’s pay, takes the train north. The trip is perilous, as is her return through besieged Nanking and by sampan across the South China Sea. But it is not until she reaches the empty house back in Hong Kong that Leah becomes her own “country of one.”
CAROLINE PETIT was born in Washington D.C., raised
in Maryland and now lives in Victoria, Australia with her husband. The
Fat Man’s Daughter is her first novel.
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