The Orwell Youth Fellows

The Orwell Youth Fellows were established in 2020. Since then, all winners and runners up of The Orwell Youth Prize have been invited to join the programme.

In their regular, facilitated Zoom meetings, the Orwell Youth Fellows form ideas, start conversations and develop new writing that is responsive to the society we live in and supports other young writers to engage with the prize.

Recent projects include Axial Tilt, a Zine inspired by our 2022 theme ‘Coming Up For Air: Writing the Climate Crisis’ (get your copy here) and The Digitalis Archives, a new online magazine delivering subscribers weekly updates from the satirical, dystopian state of Digitalis.

Hear from our inaugural Fellows themselves in this video – or find out more about all our current Fellows below!

Beth Anker

Hi, I’m Beth, I’m about to start year 11. I was one of the winners for the Orwell Youth Prize in 2023 for my piece ‘Meritocracy: The Politician’s Pipe Dream’ which is a dissection of meritocracy, how close we are to achieving it and if it’s something to strive towards in the first place. In my free time I like reading and playing rugby. Currently I’m reading Beasts of a Little Land by Juhea Kim.

Heike Ghandi

Heike is a 16-year-old from London and one of the junior 2023 winners of the Orwell Youth Prize. She currently studies computer science, economics and mathematics. Her short story ‘‘The Catharsis of a Crane’ follows a father forced to action after processing the departure of his family and unfolds the surrounding circumstances. Despite not being set in any particular time period, Heike drew inspiration from the pandemic recession; juxtaposing bleak economic imagery inside the home with vivid scenes from nature

Amelia Roles

I’m a fourteen year old high schooler who has always greatly enjoyed reading and writing. My Orwell Youth Prize piece was centred around the debate of Roe Vs Wade in the United States – the law that gave women the right to a safe abortion with was overturned by the Supreme Court in 2022, despite having been in place since 1973. What I thought was particularly interesting about this topic, is that America, while claiming to be a democratic society, didn’t take into account the opinion of the public, as it is statistically proven that the majority were against the overturning of this crucial law. My piece ‘Misconception’ focused on the feeling of dread at the knowledge that even though you don’t want to, you have to bring a child into this world once you are pregnant because there is no other option.

In the future I’m aspiring to be a journalist because I think expressing your opinion is incredibly important. I’ve just finished reading The Secret History by Donna Tartt.

 

Amy Jia

Hi! I’m a 15 year old student from Cambridgeshire, my piece, “why is it so dark?” was a runner up in the Orwell Youth Prize, which explored the darker areas of mental health from a victim’s perspective. I love to read as it broadens my imagination and creativity; having lived in China as a child allows me to encounter the charming aspects of literature from both English and Mandarin. My favourite novel is Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen, I believe it was brilliantly written and the characters are splendid, unique and beautiful – particularly Mr Darcy.

Currently, I am reading ‘The dark forest’ by CiXin Liu!

 

Ellie Lee

Hi, I am Ellie, a fourteen year old GCSE student at Oundle School. I was a junior runner up in 2023 with my poem ‘An Uncontrollable Scribble’ as my Orwell Youth Prize entry. My piece was focused on how some children in the world don’t get fair opportunities and have to do child labour in a very poor environment just because of where they were born. Besides writing, I am very interested in understanding the universe and how the nature around me is structured which has caused me to get fascinated in science. My other favourite subject is maths as I love thinking logically. One of my favourite books is ‘Animal Farm’ written by George Orwell. I’ve been very inspired by how he created an allegory of Russian Revolution so intelligently by using animals as metaphors.

Marianne Lee

Hi, my name is Marianne, and I was a runner-up for the Orwell Youth Prize with my entry, Obedience, a poem about the cyclic quality I often find in life. I am currently attending Oundle school, and I am starting year 10 this coming September. Although I have chosen my GCSE’s I am not sure what I would like to do later in life; currently I am very interested in art, history, and politics, and I absolutely love mythology. I am currently reading Vita Nostra, by Sergey and Marina Dyachenko, it is a compelling, yet confusing book, (to understand it I must read each page a few times over), and I am enjoying unravelling each chapter. I think my favourite book of all time is The Ransom of Dond, by Siobahn Dowd.

Iris Mamier

Iris is a 17 year old IB Diploma student – studying French, Social Anthropology, History, English, Maths and Biology. She was a senior winner of the 2023 Orwell Youth Prize with her multi-modal short story ‘Beware of the Dog! Says the man with the gun’, which seeks the truth behind inhumane portrayals of the refugee crisis in the media. Iris loves to read, and her favourite books to date include ‘An artist of the floating world’ by Kazuo Ishiguro and ‘The Bell’ by Iris Murdoch. She is also tempted by a good murder mystery.

Iris is driven by a love of storytelling in all its forms, and aims to write stories about big political issues which are full of humanity.

 

Lara Wong

Hello, my name is Lara. I am a 17-year-old A-level student from Surrey and a Senior Winner in the 2023 Orwell Youth Prize for my poem ‘Men’s Shoes’ on the theme of ‘Who’s in Control?’. I created this piece to open up a conversation about the boxes that societal expectation builds, starting with gender expression. I believe that words have a distinctly human power to give everyone a voice and connect people universally, deconstructing prejudices along the way.

My recent accomplishments also include: first prize winner of the 2023 Shepton Snowdrops Poetry Competition, a winner in the 2023 Friday Afternoons Song Lyric Writing Challenge on the Poetry Society’s Young Poets Network, and commended in the 2022 Wilbur Smith Author of Tomorrow Award.

Heather Chapman

Heather is a seventeen-year-old student from Oxford, currently studying English, History, Art and Biology, and hoping to study English at university. In her free time, she enjoys reading, writing, drawing, and playing Dungeons and Dragons.

Her senior runner up entry to the Orwell Youth Prize explored the role of those in power in shaping the world’s environmental and political landscape, told through a strange evening at the theatre. She is widely interested in the role of stories – both written and theatrical – in representing structures of power, both on personal and political levels.

Her favourite book is ‘On Earth We’re Briefly Gorgeous’, by Ocean Vuong, for its intricately woven story of heritage and coming of age, and merging of prose and poetical structure.

 

Cerys Shanks

I am a seventeen year old college student who greatly enjoys both writing and reading. My Orwell Youth Prize piece was focused on how climate change is impacting sea levels. I presented this in the form of a narrative centred around Blackpool. My main subjects of personal interests lie in classical civilisations, particularly in the treatment of women in the ancient world. Their roles and how they are presented in both mythology and literature carries elements that have remained over time, and I find the subject extremely interesting. ‘The Silence of The Girls’ by Pat Barker addresses the erasure of women’s voices in the classical epics and the dehumanising treatment they suffered, and is an incredible read.

Toni Agbede

Toni Agbede is a 17-year-old sixth-form student, studying French, Spanish, English literature, and Geography, and a senior winner of the Orwell Youth Prize in 2022. The idea for her poem ‘Hi! Yes, Western World Speaking’ stemmed from a geography lesson, in which a brief mention of the inequalities in the climate change narrative led her to research the topic further and inspired her to write about it in her entry.

She is highly interested in how different countries approach issues such as climate change, immigration, and the law, and she is currently reading ‘Immigration and Democracy’ by Professor Sarah Song from the University of California, Berkeley to learn more about the topic.

Jennifer Wolfe

Jennifer Wolfe is a Cambridgeshire 18-year-old going into her first year of university to study Anthropology at Kent. She was one of the senior 2022 winners of the Orwell Youth Prize with her poem ‘Out Of Time¿’, which focused on the effects of rising temperatures on the natural world, specifically plants and their development. Jennifer is interested in biology and history and understanding the natural world around her, often theming her poetry around the environment. Her favourite genres include pre-war classics (Bronte, Austen etc) and historical fiction.

She is currently reading ‘I, Claudius’ by Robert Graves, however, her favourite book is any of the ‘Lord Of The Rings’ trilogy, closely followed by ‘Mansfield Park’.

Creagh Factor

Creagh, 17, is a student passionate about expressing herself and encouraging young people to speak up in all areas of their lives.

She is an avid poet, and was a senior runner-up in the 2022 Orwell Youth Prize for her poem ‘The Milk River’ exploring our changing relationship with our rivers and oceans. Outside of her writing, Creagh is an award-winning public speaker, having represented the country in debating on Team England in 2021. Whether through the written or spoken word, she aims to explore our polarised, turbulent political climate and encourage her audience to think critically about our society.

Creagh loves exploring mythology and folklore and is currently reading the Mabinogion.

Eleanor Mead

Eleanor is a 17 year old student from London currently studying English Literature, History and Psychology. She was a senior 2022 runner up with her short story ‘2054’, exploring the impact of climate change in both hemispheres to demonstrate its far reaching effects. Eleanor hopes that her writing will inspire people to be more considerate of both the environment and one another.

James Lomax

James is an 18-year-old from Berkshire and is currently in his first year of studying ‘Palaeontology and Evolution’ at the University of Bristol. He hopes to one day find a career in Palaeontology in order to professionally harness his love for natural history.

His 2022 Senior Runner-Up entry, ‘The Conundrum of the Fossils’, uses the protection of fossils as a metaphor for the protection of the natural world in order to show the hypocrisy and apathy of the general public and those in power. James believes that the stability of the natural world is integral to the stability of the human race, and if nature suffers then so do we. He likes to write about both the power of nature and the power of a positive outlook in bleak situations.

He is currently reading ‘The Ancestor’s Tale’ by Richard Dawkins and Yan Wong.

Oluwatoni Adesanya

Hi everyone! My name is Oluwatoni, and I’m 15, living in Bromley. In 2022 I won the Orwell Youth Prize for my piece “The Power of One”, which was a critique on Western governments and their hypocrisy in addressing third world countries about the climate crisis. To this day a lot of my writing is still about economic inequality, and inequality in general, but I also enjoy learning about Physics, playing rounders, streaming grandson music on full volume and watching Oversimplified videos on YouTube. In general I love reading murder mystery and crime novels, so I’m obviously a huge Agatha Christie and Steve Cavanagh fan, and I will any any dystopian books I can get my hands on. I read The Count of Monte Cristo over the summer. My opinion. Buy the abridged version, save yourselves and don’t repeat my mistake 🙂

Evie Alam

Hi! I’m Evie, a 15-year-old student from the north east of England. I was a junior winner in 2022 for my poem ‘Destination – Underwater,’ which discusses the harrowing impacts of rising sea levels and imminent consequences for several different countries across the globe. In my spare time, I enjoy writing about a wide range of topics, such as racial discrimination and the climate crisis. I’m particularly passionate in using poetry as a vehicle to move forward in fighting inequality and am currently reading Klara and the Sun by Kazuo Ishiguro.

Aarushi Dahiya

Aarushi Dahiya is a 16-year-old student, currently in her first year of the IB Diploma programme. She is studying English Literature, Mathematics, Physics, Chemistry, Economics and French. She won the Junior Prize in 2022 with her short story ‘The Law of the Jungle’. Inspired by Orwell’s Animal Farm, she envisioned a world where animals, frustrated by human inaction, have seized control and rescued the Earth from catastrophe. She is interested in democratic backsliding and its implications for women’s political participation, particularly in her native India. Furthermore, she is passionate about using her writing for science communication. She is currently reading more books simultaneously than ought to be allowed; the main two are Sophie’s World and Emma.

Ruby McIntee

Ruby McIntee is from Dundee, Scotland and is a 2022 Junior Orwell Prize winner. Currently studying Higher Maths, English, Economics, History and Modern Studies, Ruby is passionate about politics and philosophy. Her piece was about the impact of everyday consumer choices on the environment, notably focusing on the difficulty separating yourself from a system which rewards unethical consumption. She is an editor for her school’s newspaper, and was commended in the 2021/22 Scottish Schools young writer of the year essay completion, for a piece on the addictive effects of  TikTok on young people. Outside of writing, Ruby enjoys debate, is an avid reader and works as a lifeguard.

Noah Dryden-Pell

Hello, my name’s Noah. I’m 16 and I’m from London, studying for A-Levels in English Literature, Drama and Politics. I’ve been an Orwell Youth Fellow since 2022; my entry to the prize, the short story Push The Button, focused on the failure of world leaders to mitigate the climate crisis. Outside of writing, my main interests are acting, film and music. I’m currently reading Capital by Karl Marx.

Maia Betts

I’m Maia and I’m currently in year 11 working hard towards my GCSE’s. I want to study English, History and Art (maybe French) at A-level next year.
I love reading, my favourite authors are Sylvia Plath, Sally Rooney, Oscar Wilde and Virginia Woolf, when I’m not revising or reading I listen to music; Harry Styles, Taylor Swift, The Arctic Monkeys and The Smiths, go to concerts when I can, and love watching movies, the classics and new releases.

Ruby Kalayil-Peacock

Ruby is a 17-year-old A-level student, studying English Literature, French and History. She was a junior runner up for the Orwell Youth Prize in 2022, with her piece on how women are affected by, and are working to combat, climate change across the world. She hopes to continue writing to illuminate issues that are close to her heart and that she feels are especially pertinent in this day and age, something George Orwell himself was particularly adept at and famed for.

Ruby loves to read, and is currently reading The Underground Railroad by Colson Whitehead. She enjoys books about Classical mythology, and historical fiction, as well as detective fiction, particularly that of Agatha Christie, but her favourite book is The Book Thief by Markus Zusak.

Anya Edgerton

Anya is a 16-year-old student from the Isle of Wight studying Chemistry, Biology, French and English Literature. She was a 2021 junior winner of the Orwell Youth Prize with her short screenplay ‘A Small Thing’ which explores students’ relationships with the texts they study, and realising that their own words are just as important as those in their textbooks. Anya often gets very angry about the chronic individualism in our society and its far-reaching tentacles of suffering, as well as overwhelming issues such as class, race and climate change-and tries to channel that anger and overwhelmed-ness into some kind of productive action. She is probably trying to read 8 books at the same time, the script of Fleabag (again), or the work of Kae Tempest.

Faith Falayi

Faith Falayi is an 18-year-old from Cambridgeshire who is about to start her first year studying English at Robinson College, Cambridge. She aspires to use her writing as a means for social change, a tool to reflect and bring to light issues facing society.

Her senior winning prize poem ‘New Hair, Who Dis (Dear Mrs Johnson)’ explores the beauty of black hair and self-expression. Following the 2020 Black Lives Matter movement, she hopes that art and literature may become a way for black people to celebrate their identities, as well as educating others about the black experience.

Faith is currently reading “Things Fall Apart” by Chinua Achebe.

Bella Rew

Hello! My name is Bella and my poem ‘Two for Joy’ was one of the senior winners of the 2021 Orwell Youth Prize. I wrote it inspired by the new kinship myself and many others experienced with nature over lockdown and the harsh reality that we might lose this relationship to climate change inaction. I’m a passionate intersectional feminist and try to engage with all areas of global and national politics. I’m also a keen actor and love historical fiction such as ‘Wolf Hall’ by Hilary Mantel. I believe all writing has the power to illuminate social issues and pressure political power which is why I hope to have a career as a writer one day! I’m going into my first year studying English at Corpus Christi College, Cambridge and am currently reading ‘The Warrior Queens: Boadicea’s Chariot’ by Antonia Fraser.

Jennifer Yang

Hi, I’m Jennifer. I am an avid reader (especially interested in Modernist literature) and I relish writing creatively in my free time. Growing up, I’ve always read western literature, nonetheless, my early upbringing in China has reminded me frequently that I should never cease writing about the place I call home. Having lived in the UK and China, I’ve witnessed divisions, but I believe there is something universal in humanity that is able to bring us together. Great writers strive to find this universality, and I hope I can join them in this search.

I am a big fan of Virginia Woolf as I resonate with her writing and personal experiences; I also love reading her work from different critical perspectives. I will pursue my love for English further at Oxford University, and am currently reading ‘Orientalism’ from the endless reading list.

Jude Leese

I am an 18-year-old film student from London and a 2021 senior winner for my piece “Work Experience As A Young Campaigner”. The poem is based on my personal experiences of grassroots politics, and is intended as a tribute to the hard work done by local councillors everywhere. While I entered a poem for the prize, my main area of interest is film, and I hope to combine both my interests in film and politics in my future work. My influences include such directors as Hal Ashby, Stanley Kubrick and Jean-Luc Godard, and my favourite book is “Easy Riders, Raging Bulls” by Peter Biskind.

Laurell Jarrett-Anderson

Laurell Jarrett-Anderson is a 17 year old A Level student from Bristol, who currently studies English Language, Psychology and Sociology. She was a senior runner up in 2021 for her piece ‘Notes On Being Black’, which explores racial issues in a modern context and delves deeper into the harsh reality of racism online. With a keen interest in the fashion industry and a passion for writing, she hopes to go on to complete a degree in Fashion Journalism at university.

Laurell is currently reading ‘Kitchen’ by Banana Yoshimoto!

Marnie McPartland

Marnie McPartland is a 16-year-old student from London studying English Literature, History and Latin. She enjoys voicing her opinions through her writing and submitting articles for community publications. Marnie volunteers at her local library for a children’s reading scheme, and at an Oxfam bookshop.

Marnie was a runner-up in the 2021 Orwell Youth Prize for her piece ‘Equality in Education’. Her piece, written in the style of a newspaper article, imagined a future where elite university entrance was available for the highest achieving pupils at every school in the UK. This would mean that any pupil would have the chance to attend a top university, irrespective of their school education and background.

Some of Marnie’s favourite books include ‘Rebecca’ by Daphne de Maurier and ‘The Last King of Scotland’ by Giles Foden, and she is currently reading ‘The Colour Purple’ by Alice Walker.

Max Baker

Hi! My name is Max Baker and I’m from Maidenhead in the South East. I love reading and used to devour fantasy books down at my local library until the pandemic struck and I began to take a closer interest in the conduct of the public figures who lead our country. George Orwell’s writing was always inspirational to me as it was simultaneously artistic, down-to-earth, and politically profound. His proactive approach to research and writing inspired me to explore the social and cultural trends I’ve observed during the pandemic (resulting in my story’s “Network”–the shadowy master-of-puppets social media-government). Since then, I’ve been trying to develop my political thoughts and explore different ways of running the countrylike sortition and participatory budgeting schemes.

Ruby Alexander

Ruby is 19 and a second year Geography student at Durham University. She was senior runner up in the 2021 Orwell Youth Prize for her essay ‘Mending the Safety Net’, which explored new strategies to reduce homelessness. Ruby is interested in questions of power, control and inequality, particularly in relation to unheard and marginalised perspectives. 

 

Ruby is currently reading Azadi by Arundhati Roy. 

William Walker

My name is William. When I was 13, I was a Junior Winner of the Orwell Youth Prize, 2021. I wrote to raise awareness about the plight of the UK wetlands and the way we can help restore them. Attenborough once said, “No one will protect what they don’t care about.” I care that we could lose UK species, like curlews, so through environmental writing I hope to raise awareness of the biodiversity crisis: I was a finalist in the Wicked Young Writers Awards and contributed to the Youth Fellows Zine. I enjoy history, nature, photography, English, playing violin and electric guitar.

Varscha Arul

My name is Varscha Arul and I am 15 years old from Milton Keynes. I’m currently a student at Aylesbury High School and I’m also a junior runner up for this year’s Orwell Prize for my speech called ‘Why.’ It focuses on shedding light to the social injustices and inhumane acts that are taking place in Sri Lanka to Tamilians as a result of the 25 year long civil war. With my speech, I was determined to not only highlight the oppression and violation Tamil people face at the hands of their own government but to also point out the deafening silence and ignorance of the rest of the world.

Marnie Rauf

I’m Marnie, an 18 year old student, studying English language, literature and sociology. My piece was inspired by Elizabeth Gaskell’s ‘North and South’. Being from the North east, the novel instantly resonated with me. Therefore, I decided to write about my own experiences here. My piece is mostly non fiction, and follows my trajectory of small persistent changes that led to my personal success. And most importantly, how a kind, then stranger, saw potential in me, inspiring confidence in myself.

I’m currently reading ‘Mary Barton’, also by Gaskell and set in the North East. I prefer 19th century literature, especially works like hers that are particularly cathartic, that have been effective for increasing my empathy.

Mya Basiime

Mya Basiime is a 16-year-old student, studying English Literature, Economics, Spanish and History. She is deeply motivated by the prospect of an equitable and fairer society and the structural inequalities which continually pervade society – a topic she explored in her essay ‘What he left me with’. She looks to writing as a source of motivation and a form of catharsis, hoping to use language as a tool of compassion.

Mya is currently reading The Guest List and the works of Chimimanda Ngozi Adichie.

Helen Chick

Helen is a 16 year old student and was a junior winner for the Orwell Youth Prize in 2020 for her poem “To The Boy Considered My Equal” which talks about the everyday sexism young girls go through in their lives. She is interested in the systemic oppression that many everyday people face and how literature and writing can make a difference in the world. She is currently reading Animal by Sara Pascoe.

Lauren Debruin

Lauren DeBruin is a first year English student at Emmanuel College, Cambridge. She is originally from Hertfordshire and was a winner of the senior prize 2020. Lauren’s short story, ‘What We Lost’, explored the possible future our planet could face if we do not work to combat climate change immediately. As well as the climate crisis, Lauren is determined to illuminate the disparities between privately and state educated students, and is dedicated to intersectional feminism in her work.

The variety of periods, genres and forms Lauren studies in her degree have enabled her to understand the different ways a writer may choose to deliver their message, and how a reader may interpret them.

Grace Donaldson

Grace is a 17 year old student from Scotland currently undertaking Advanced Highers in both English and Modern Studies, as well as A-Level History. She was a runner-up in the 2020 Orwell Youth Prize for her short story ‘Perpetual’, and hopes to further her abilities as a writer with a degree in English and Media Studies. She is passionate about structural inequality, and hopes to use her work as a platform to explore potential areas for change.

Grace is currently reading ‘A Streetcar Named Desire’ by Tennessee Williams.

Tom Finlayson

Tom Finlayson is a 16-year-old from Dronfield studying English Literature, History, French and Film Studies A Levels.  He is interested in the future issues facing the world and considering how inequality interacts with these, fascinated by the way geography, class, sex, race, employment and age affect people’s lives.

He won the junior Orwell Youth Prize with his short story Not So Welcome Break, which explores the issues of automation, renewable energy and growing inequality.  As these issues come more and more to the forefront of our lives, it asked the question of how we should balance the greater good with achieving widespread fairness and equity.

Tom is a big fan of The Godfather by Mario Puzo and is currently reading Catch-22 by Joseph Heller.

Molly Hammerton-Woodhouse

I am an 18 year-old A-Level student based in Rotherham who is studying English Literature, English Language and Psychology. I am interesting in all parts of the human psyche, which may relate to my fascination with the Gothic and unnerving. As well as delving into the dark, I am passionate about the fight against climate change and social inequality for people of all walks of life, something that my poem for the 2020 Orwell Youth Prize – ‘The Future’ – explored using a dystopian construct. I love dystopia; some of the books that have had the most profound effect on me are from the dystopian genre such as ‘Warm Bodies’ by Isaac Marion and ‘The Maze Runner’ series by James Dashner. However, my favourite book is ‘Stalking Jack the Ripper’ by Kerri Maniscalco.

I am currently reading ‘The Wicked King’, the second book in ‘The Folk of the Air’ series by Holly Black which is a young adult fantasy series with many morally ambiguous characters – something I would like to work on in my own writing.

Madeleine Hobern

Madeleine Hobern is a first year Architecture student at Corpus Christi College, Cambridge. She is driven by creating a world where the built environment can serve as a basis for social equality, climate progression, and collective wellbeing. Inspired by current events, Madeleine’s essay on ‘Designing for Distance’, achieving runners up prize in 2020, illustrating how the Coronavirus pandemic is impacting on the architecture of today and tomorrow. She has a keen passion for learning from the past and present to develop beneficial environments for the future.

Madeleine is currently reading Frank Lloyd Wright’s Natural Design, Organic Architecture: Lessons for Building Green.

Hugh Ludford

I am a 15 year old schoolboy from the East of England. I love sport, especially running, hockey and cycling, because of the freedom associated with exercise. I find a similar kind of escape in books. Derek Landy said that he is every book he’s ever read, the sum of his obsessions. Given this, I am The BFG, I am How To Train Your Dragon, I am Harry Potter, I am definitely Skulduggery Pleasant, and I am the Book Thief. (I mostly like to think of myself as Alex Rider, though!) I think being the sum of what you have read is very true, as these books will influence you throughout your life.

I am currently reading The Cousins by Karen M. McManus, but I have a very diverse taste and it could be anything after that.

Manal Nadeem

Manal Nadeem is a 19-year-old student – although she likes to think of people-watching as her part-time job: it brings her enormous satisfaction to take notice of the world – its characters, its plotlines and problems – then pour these reflections onto paper. She is particularly interested in writing that engages with the sociopolitical as a kind of megaphone to amplify marginalised causes. To this end, she wrote the essay, ‘The Poverty Pandemic’, which was a Senior Runner Up for the 2020 Orwell Youth Prize.

Her favourite books include A Room of One’s Own by Virginia Woolf and anything by Arundhati Roy or Jhumpa Lahiri.

Noah Robinson

Noah Robinson is a playwright and performer. He was a runner-up to the junior prize in 2020 for his play ‘Here There Are No People’, praised by Kayo Chingonyi for its “exciting combination of styles” and Tishani Doshi for its sensitivity in “leading into questions of oral history, memory and collective trauma”.

His other work includes ‘Now, I have become Death’ for Modern Art Oxford, ‘Idola’ for the Orwell Youth Fellows’ zine ‘Axial Tilt’ and projects with Phosphoros Theatre and The Paper Birds at the National Theatre. He made his debut performance at the National Theatre as part of River Stage in August 2022.

He is studying Law at the University of Bristol but is originally from Reading.

Jamie See

Jamie See is a 15-year-old student in Winchester. She was a junior runner up in 2020 for her collection of poems ‘A Love Symphony to the World’, where she explores the inequalities and problems faced by the average person, while advocating for hope in the future. In her free time, she enjoys reading all genres of books, writing poetry and debating about social injustices. She believes writing is an expression of one’s thoughts and feelings, and sees literature as a reflection of the human experience.

Jamie is currently reading Woman on the Edge of Time by Marge Piercy.

Naomi Thomas

Naomi Thomas is a 17-year-old writer from Sheffield. She was a senior runner up in the George Orwell Youth Prize 2020, one of five shortlisted writers for the BBC Young Writers’ Award 2020, and highly commended for the Young Northern Writers’ Award 2020. She is particularly passionate about fighting to stop the current climate crisis, and hopes to use her writing in order to do this, after being inspired by the way authors such as Charles Dickens and Victor Hugo have battled for social justice in the past.

Rosaleen Tite-Ahern

Rosaleen Tite Ahern is a 19 year old gap-year student from South Manchester. She writes for and volunteers with the charity Youth Leads, and is a representative on the GMYCA. Next year she will be attending Durham University to study Archaeology and Anthropology. Rosaleen was a senior winner in 2020. Her essay ‘Streets in the Sky’ explored the relationship between architecture, communities and hope, through the story of the 1960s slum demolition in Hulme. She wants to use her work to promote cooperation and empathy, and to shine a light on untold stories.

Rosaleen is currently reading ‘The Book of Trespass’ by Nick Hayes, and would absolutely recommend ‘Humankind’ by Rutger Bregman.

Jessica Tunks

Jessica Tunks is an 18 year old A Level student from London, who currently studies Biology, English Literature, Photography, and Psychology. She hopes to go on to complete a degree in Psychology at university. She was a senior winner in 2020 for her piece ‘Knifepoint’, an article about the possible causes of and solutions to the problem of youth violence, drawing on personal experience and case studies from successful Violent Reduction Units to build her case. She is passionate about many social justice issues and hopes to continue to use her writing to fight for a fairer world.

Jessica is currently reading ‘The Thing Around Your Neck’ by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie.