Lisa Ko's fiction has appeared in Best American Short Stories 2016, Apogee Journal, Narrative, Copper Nickel, the Asian Pacific American Journal, and elsewhere. She has been awarded fellowships and residencies from the New York Foundation for the Arts, the MacDowell Colony, the Lower Manhattan Cultural Council, Writers OMI at Ledig House, the Jerome Foundation, and Blue Mountain Center, among others. She was born in New York City, where she now lives.
"Here is imperative reading: a vivid fictional exploration of what
it means to belong and what it feels like when you don't . . . Ko
gives us an unsparing portrait of the resilience and grit it takes
to risk everything to break free of tradition and start over in a
foreign land."
--O, The Oprah Magazine (Favorite Books of 2017) "[A] dazzling
debut . . . Filled with exquisite, heartrending details, Ko's
exploration of the often-brutal immigrant experience in America is
a moving tale of family and belonging."
--People (Book of the Week) "When Deming Guo was 11, his Chinese
immigrant mother, Polly, left for work at a nail salon and never
returned. In alternating perspectives, this heart-wrenching
literary debut tells both of their stories. Grade: A."
--Entertainment Weekly "Ambitious . . . Lisa Ko has taken the
headlines and has reminded us that beyond them lie messy, brave,
extraordinary, ordinary lives."
--The New York Times Book Review "This wrenching and
all-too-topical debut novel picks up the life of an 11-year-old
American-born boy on the day his mother, an undocumented Chinese
immigrant, disappears . . . Ko uses the voices of both the boy and
his birth mother to tell a story that unfolds in graceful,
realistic fashion and defies expectations."
--Janet Maslin, The New York Times "Lisa Ko's The Leavers is the
year's powerful debut you won't want to miss. The Leavers expertly
weaves a tale of the conflicts between love and loyalty, personal
identity and familial obligation, and the growing divide between
freedom and social justice. An affecting novel that details the the
gut-wrenching realities facing illegal immigrants and their
families in modern America, Lisa Ko's debut is the 2017 fiction
release you can't afford to miss."
--Bustle.com "An exceptionally well written, fully realized work of
art portraying the circumstances and inner worlds -- the motives
and emotional weather -- of its two central characters. Ko is so
psychologically penetrating, so acute in her passing observations
and deft in the quick views she affords of her characters' inner
lives and surroundings, that her skill and empathy give real
joy."
--Barnes Noble Review "The Leavers describes the devastation caused
by forced, abrupt and secret detentions that occur daily under our
current Immigration Act. The novel weaves from past to present,
from immediate abandonment to chronic loss, showing how the
unfathomable disappearance of a mother eats into her son's effort
to "move forward." . . . The story soars when Ko writes of
immigration detention-- a civil detention for violation of a civil
law that is as callous and brutal as the worst sort of criminal
incarceration . . . [The Leavers] lets us feel the knife twist of
sweeping government authority wielded without conscience or
control. [Ko's] work gives poignant voice to the fact the U.S. can,
and must, write a better immigration system."
--Ms. Magazine "Consider this book a must-read: They may be
fictional, but these characters have a lot to teach us about the
difficulties of belonging and the plight of illegal
immigrants."
--Marie Claire "Poignant and timely, this novel is ripe for
discussion."
--Real Simple "One of 2017's most anticipated fiction debuts... The
winner of last year's PEN/Bellwether Prize, which recognizes
fiction that explores issues of social justice, The Leavers feels
as relevant as ever as the future of immigrants in America hangs in
the balance."
--Time.com "Ko's debut is a sweeping examination of family through
the eyes of a single mother, a Chinese immigrant, and her U.S.-born
son, whose separation haunts and defines their lives. Ko's stunning
tale of love and loyalty - to family, to country--is a fresh and
moving look at the immigrant experience in America, and is as
timely as ever."
--Publishers Weekly, starred review "Touching upon themes such as
identity, determination, addiction, and loyalty, the author clearly
shows readers that she is an emerging writer to watch. Ko's writing
is strong, and her characters, whether major or minor, are
skillfully developed. Readers who enjoy thoughtfully told
relationship tales by authors such as Lisa See, Jamie Ford, and
Nadia Hashimi will appreciate."
--Library Journal, starred review "Vividly written and moving, The
Leavers is an engrossing story of one young boy struggling to
adjust to his new life without his mother and community."
--Buzzfeed "A timely touching story . . . excellent: compelling,
well-realized, gritty and complicated."
--Kansas City Star "The Leavers is a masterful debut novel that
examines borders and belonging, and the universal desire for
love."
--Redbook.com "This excellent book has already won the
PEN/Bellwether Award for Socially Engaged Fiction (selected by
Barbara Kingsolver). One morning, eleven-year-old Deming Guo's
mother is unexpectedly deported to China. Deming is then adopted by
a white family and renamed Daniel Wilkinson. But as he grows up, he
struggles to reconcile his new life with his former one."
--Bustle.com "Ko's debut novel has already won the 2016
Pen/Bellwether Award for Socially Engaged Fiction, a prize created
and selected by Barbara Kingsolver. The contest awards a novel that
'addresses issues of social justice and the impact of culture and
politics on human relationships, ' and Ko's book certainly fits
that laudable description."
--TheMillions.com "An inspiring debut, which focuses on issues of
assimilation and the true meaning of home. Ko's unforgettable
narrative voice is a credit to the moving stories of immigration,
loss, recovery, and acceptance that feel particularly suited to our
times."
--Nylon Magazine "Lisa Ko's The Leavers, which won the
PEN/Bellwether Prize, may be a work of fiction, but the plot twists
mirror America's own urgent and timely political landscape."
--W Magazine "Gorgeously redemptive . . . Lisa Ko's debut novel is
an achingly beautiful read about immigration, adoption, and the
drive to belong. Beyond the desensitizing media coverage, Ko gives
faces, (multiple) names, and details to create a riveting story of
a remarkable family coming, going, leaving . . . all in hopes of
someday returning to one another."
--Christian Science Monitor "If you come away from reading The
Leavers with a sense of disconnect, that's no
surprise--disconnectedness is its central theme, its structural and
stylistic touchpoint, and the emotional engine driving its main
characters . . . The Leavers stands firmly as Lisa Ko's act of
arrival."
--The Rumpus "A searing novel about a mother and son who are
separated by forces beyond their control in New York, a book that
promises to challenge our perceptions of immigration, adoption,
family and American values."
--Kveller.com "This timely novel depicts the heart- and
spirit-breaking difficulties faced by illegal immigrants with
meticulous specificity."
--Kirkus Reviews "Skillfully written . . . those who are interested
in closely observed, character-driven fiction will want to leave
room for The Leavers on their shelves."
--Booklist "What Ko seeks to do with The Leavers is illuminate the
consequence of [deportation] facilities, and of the deportation
machine as a whole, on individual lives. Ko's book arrives at a
time when it is most needed; its success will be measured in its
ability to move its readership along the continuum between
complacency and advocacy."
--Los Angeles Review of Books "The Leavers . . . using effective
literary techniques and beautiful language--powerfully illustrates
the impact that social policies and injustice have on the lives of
individuals and families."
--Bookreporter.com An "assured debut novel...a timely story of
immigrant families in America...a thoughtful work about
undocumented immigrants and the threats they endure."
--BookPage "There was a time I would have called Lisa Ko's novel
beautifully written, ambitious and moving, and all of that is true,
but it's more than that now: if you want to understand a forgotten
and essential part of the world we live in, The Leavers is required
reading."
--Ann Patchett "Courageous, sensitive, and perfectly of this
moment: The Leavers is everything I could hope for in a winner of
the Bellwether Prize."
--Barbara Kingsolver "In The Leavers, Lisa Ko has created one of
the most courageous mother character's in recent memory. Polly is
brash, brave and heartbreaking and her ferocity is marvelous to
behold. The Leavers is about the bonds between parents and children
and the many pulls of home. It was a book I did not want to
end."
--Kaitlyn Greenidge, author of We Love You, Charlie Freeman "A rich
and sensitive portrait of lives lived across borders, cultures, and
languages. . . one of the most engaging, deeply probing, and
beautiful books I have read this year."
--Laila Lalami, author of The Moor's Account "A moving mother/son
story and welcome contribution to immigrant literature. In writing
about Polly and her son Deming, Ko captures one family's unique
experience of becoming American while also exposing the loss of
status, economic desperation, physical endangerment, and
psychological grit of the undocumented worker as well as the
alienation, double consciousness, mobility, and comparative access
of the first generation."
--Emily Raboteau, author of Searching for Zion "The story's most
heartbreaking disclosures are powerful in their indictment of the
unrealistic expectations placed upon struggling families."
--Foreword Reviews
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