Young writers receive Allen awards
Anabelle Castagne of Holy Name Convent took home the top prize, Young Writer of the Year, and $2,500, as well as the Senior Fiction prize of $1,000. Junior Writer of the Year, Krystoff Kissoon of Fatima College, took home $1,500 in addition to his prize of $1,000 for winning in the Junior Fiction category. Other winners were Giselle Permell (Junior Poetry: $500); Veronika Kratz (Senior Creative Non-Fiction: $1,000); Mariella Rivas (Senior Poetry: $1,000); Amrita Annamunthodo (Senior Drama: $1,000). No prizes were awarded for Junior Drama or Junior Creative Non-Fiction.
In the Junior Category, Cavan Byrne, Michelle Chan Wah, Michael Phillip, Joshua Sammy, Kalifa Lovelace, Harold Raghunandan and Aleah Joseph received certificates as finalists in the competition, as well as Simone Delzin, Shanice Hercules, Warren G De Mills, Kevonn Morgan, Precious St Clair, Reon Elder, Maria Reverand, Amy Roopnarine, and Anastasia Toppin in the Senior Category.
Writers were asked to submit a body of work for the competition. Their works, submitted between September and December, 2010, were judged in the junior category (ages 12-15) and the senior category (ages 16-19), in four genres: poetry, fiction, creative non-fiction and drama. Judging was blind and done by a panel led by journalist and author Judy Raymond. The members of the judging panel were Kevin Baldeosingh, Debbie Jacob, Roslyn Carrington, Sharon Millar and Justice James Aboud.
Head judge Judy Raymond said in her remarks, “For the six judges, reading the 80 bodies of work entered […] was entertaining and revealing. The entries were ambitious, adventurous and wide-ranging. Few subjects or techniques seemed too large, too deep or too difficult for our young writers. Overall, the junior entries were more unpretentious and unselfconscious than some of the senior entries, but no less ambitious or accomplished.
“The writers used rhyme, realism, calypso, high poetic diction, local dialect and Standard English. They offered slices of life and moral lessons, fantasy worlds and folklore.
“Their subjects included not only the more predictable ones, such as school—which was treated in lively and unexpected ways—but also vampires, roti, talking farm animals, immortality, horseracing, cricket, an American detective working in Couva, and an old lady who has a heart attack after the PNM election defeat.”
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"Young writers receive Allen awards"