Hiba Noor Khan is an English children's author and physics teacher. Her middle grade historical fiction novel Safiyyah's War (2023) won a 2024 Jhalak Prize among other accolades.
In 2019, Khan was commissioned to write an installment of Penguin Random House's Extraordinary Lives series about Malala Yousafzai.[8] Via Macmillan, Khan published her first picture book The Little War Cat in 2020, with illustrations provided by fellow CCHS alumnus Laura Chamberlain. Khan had been inspired by the true story of Mohammad Alaa Aljaleel, an Aleppo ambulance driver who rescued over 30 cats during the Syrian Civil War.[6][9]
Khan then wrote the non-fiction picture book Inspiring Inventors Who Are Changing Our Future (2022) for Walker Books' People Power series, illustrated by Salini Perera.[10] Macmillan also picked up Khan's physics book How to Spaghettify Your Dog (2023), illustrated by Harry Woodgate and another non-fiction work One Home: Eighteen Stories of Hope from Young Activists, illustrated by Rachael Dean.[11]
At the start of 2023, Andersen Press acquired the rights to publish Khan's debut middle grade novel Safiyyah's War later that year.[12] Told from the perspective of an 11-year-old Muslim girl, the novel is based on the true story of how the Grand Mosque of Paris during World War II protected Jews by forging identity documents and allowing them to seek shelter in the catacombs.[13][14]Safiyyah's War won the 2024 Jhalak Prize[15] and an Indie Book Award for Children's Fiction.[16] It was also shortlisted for the Carnegie Medal[17] and the Branford Boase Award.[18]
Khan is set to reunite with Andersen Press for the release of her second novel The Line They Drew Through Us in 2025.[19]
Bibliography
Fiction
The Little War Cat (2020)
Safiyyah's War (2023)
The Line They Drew Through Us (2025)
Non-fiction
The Extraordinary Life of Malala Yousafzai (2019) (part of Extraordinary Lives series)
Inspiring Inventors Who Are Changing Our Future (2022) (part of People Power series)
How to Spaghettify Your Dog (2023)
One Home: Eighteen Stories of Hope from Young Activists (2024)