Book 1

White Fox

by Chen Jiatong

Published 5 September 2019
 
The first novel in the magical White Fox series
- a beautifully illustrated tale of a young fox and a magical
moonstone.
'[A] delight, full of peril, friendship and mysticism'
FINANCIAL TIMES


A young white fox called Dilah returns home to find his mother
gravely injured. Before she dies, she tells him about a treasure
with the power to make animals human.


The clues to its location are contained in a moonstone buried
beneath their den – but wicked blue foxes seek the treasure
too, and Dilah must race to find it first.


Along the way, he meets all sorts of other creatures: a friendly
seal, an ancient tortoise and a fierce leopard – but
can he stay one step ahead?





The first book in the White Fox series, a bestseller
in China.

The first middle-grade children’s fiction series
ever to be translated into English from Chinese.

Themes of conservation, nature, civilisation and what
it really means to be human.

Translated by the award-winning Jennifer Feeley, with
gorgeous black-and-white line illustrations by acclaimed Chinese
artist Viola Wang.

 

Book 2

White Fox in the Forest

by Chen Jiatong

Published 1 April 2021
 
The second novel in the Chinese bestselling White Fox
series, translated by Jennifer Feeley and with illustrations by
Viola Wang.
'Full of peril, friendship and mysticism' FINANCIAL
TIMES


The quest continues as white fox Dilah and his friends follow
the moonstone's guiding light, hearts set on transforming into humans.



Along the way, they discover hostile terrain, new friends, fearsome
enemies and legendary magic - including a mythical enchanted
forest which may be the answer to all their prayers ... but can
they pass the ultimate test and prove they have what it takes to
be human?


An epic tale of friendship, bravery and sacrifice awaits ...






The second book in the White Fox series, a bestseller
in China.



The first middle-grade series ever to be translated from
Chinese into English.



Translated by the award-winning Jennifer Feeley, with
gorgeous black-and-white line illustrations by acclaimed Chinese-born
artist Viola Wang.