Mr. Chow's Night Market
Emily Sun Li author Yu Ting Cheng illustrator
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Penguin Putnam Inc
Publishing:14th Apr '26
£17.99
This title is due to be published on 14th April, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

Mr. Chow lives for the night, when the moon is a wok full of simmering oil. Too bad he owns a supermarket and has to wake up very, very early. Mr. Chow hates mornings and so does his store: The shopping carts are sluggish, the front door yawns, and the pomelos roll down the aisle in a sleepy daze. When disaster strikes, Mr. Chow seeks advice from other workers and the similarly buoyant, anthropromophic buildings they work in. And soon, he discovers that his store doesn't have to be a morning market... it can be a night market!
"A sure hit for fans of Joanna Ho and Grace Lin." —Booklist
"Eloquent but child-friendly, food-related imagery enlivens the text (the moon is compared to a “wok full of simmering oil,” the sun to a “melting mango”), while smiles on inanimate objects, from doors to lanterns, create an enchantingly sweet world. A visual delight—and vindication for night owls." —Kirkus Reviews
"Colorful illustrations created both digitally and with pencil are endlessly expressive, as even inanimate objects—from shopping carts and windows to pomelos and corn chips—have faces, and their reactions to Mr. Chow and his antics add a fun, playful element to the story. Meanwhile, the text is poetic, employing comestible metaphors and similes as a motif to draw in listeners and add to the overall night market theme. The author includes an end note that details the history of Taiwan’s night markets along with her own experiences at these unique destinations in Taiwanese culture. Any night owl or kid who goes against the grain will see themselves in Mr. Chow’s contented smile." —BCCB
Rendering bustling days and serene nights, dynamic pencil and digital cartooning captures the protagonist’s night-owl innovation, while visuals of anthropomorphic Taipei buildings and food-related phrasing (“The sun is an egg dripping hot yolk on Mr. Chow’s face”) add levity to this tale of transition and self-understanding." —Publishers Weekly
ISBN: 9780593887035
Dimensions: 224mm x 291mm x 9mm
Weight: 437g
48 pages