Laline Paull was born in England. Her parents were first-generation Indian immigrants. She studied English at Oxford, screenwriting in Los Angeles, and theatre in London, where she has had two plays performed at the Royal National Theatre. She is a member of BAFTA and the Writers’ Guild of America. She lives in England by the sea with her husband, the photographer Adrian Peacock, and their three children. ‘The Bees’ is her first novel. It received wide critical acclaim and was chosen as an Amazon Rising Star.
‘[A] gripping Cinderella/Arthurian tale with lush Keatsian
adjectives’ Margaret Atwood, via Twitter
‘Beautifully written and unusual … Captivating … A brave and
original story that highlights our modern environmental crimes, and
offers a fascinating glimpse into the intricacies of bee world …
Any book that changes the way we see our world surely deserves to
be a success’ Lucy Atkins, Sunday Times
‘Ambitious and bold … told with such rapturously attentive
imagination … The tale zooms along with such propulsive and
addictive prose … Few novels create such a singular reading
experience. The buzz you will hear surrounding this book and its
astonishing author is utterly deserved’ New York Times
‘One wild ride. A sensual, visceral mini-epic about timeless
rituals and modern environmental disaster. Paull's heartpounding
novel wrenches us into a new world’ Emma Donoghue
‘This unusual and cunningly imagined thriller hurtles us through
the very bizarre life and adventures of Flora 717 … Strangely
thought-provoking’ Angus Clarke, The Times
‘A rich, strange book, utterly convincing in its portrayal of the
mindset of a bee and a hive. I finished it feeling I knew exactly
how bees think and live. This is what sets us humans apart from
other animals, that our imagination can allow us to create a
complete, believable world so different from our own’ Tracy
Chevalier
‘It is the best novel of its kind since “Watership Down”. All the
tension of a palace intrigue and the heart of a small, undaunted
hero. An astonishing achievement’ Martin Cruz Smith
‘What Laline Paull has accomplished here is multivalent: a
rumination on nature; a portrait of the struggle between individual
and the stifling matrix of society; and a depiction of how humanity
might organize itself along different lines. I’d call it, in the
end, science fiction at its best.’ Paul Di Filippo, Locus
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