Lani Wendt Young

Lani Wendt Young (born in Apia) is a Samoan writer, editor, publisher and journalist. She is the author of ten books including the bestselling Young Adult series TELESA.

Background

Wendt Young was born and raised in Apia, Samoa.[1] Her father is Samoan from the villages of Lefaga, Vaiala, Sapapalii, and Malie. Her mother is NZ Maori of Ngati Kahungunu.[2]

Career

"I wrote the first book because it was the kind of thing I wanted to read as a 14 to 16-year-old growing up in the islands. There were always so many stories set in other parts of the world but never anything I could directly connect with - never anything in Samoa."

—Wendt-Young speaking about her series Telesa.[1]

Young is the 2018 ACP Pacific Laureate, selected by the Africa, Caribbean, Pacific Group of States. The writer prize recognises creativity, courage and entrepreneurship. The prize acknowledged her fiction writing, utilising of digital publishing to take Samoan stories to a global audience, and also her journalism.

Wendt Young is a co-founder of the online media site Samoa Planet. In May 2018 she was the recipient of the Douglas Gabb Australia Pacific Journalism Internship, hosted by ABC News and the Australian Dept of Foreign Affairs and Trade. In 2017, she was one of 10 "outstanding journalists" from the Pacific selected to report on the 2017 United Nations Climate Change Conference, held in Bonn, Germany.[3]

She is the author of the Young Adult fantasy Telesa series, which has been described as the Pacific version of Twilight, and credited with helping to inspire young Pacific people around the world to read fiction from Oceania. The story is set in modern Samoa and is inspired by ancient mythology.

In 2015, Wendt Young published two books in her contemporary romance series -Scarlet Secrets and Scarlet Lies.

In 2011 Young's Sleepless in Samoa: A Collection of Short Fiction won the USP Press Prize for Fiction. It was later published as Afakasi Woman: A Collection of Short Fiction. She also writes stories for children, which have been published by the New Zealand School Journal.[4]

She was commissioned in 2009 to research and write' 'Pacific Tsunami Galu Afi. The book gave accounts of over 180 survivors, rescuers, medical teams and aid workers from Samoa, American Samoa and the Tongan island of Niuatoputapu. The printing of the book was funded by the Government of Australia.

In 2002 she won the Telecom Samoa short story competition. Her short fiction has since been published in collections in New Zealand, Australia and Samoa.

Young has called blogging her "first writing love" and her blog Sleepless in Samoa has an international following. She chronicles with wry humor,the parenting journey raising 5 children. She also writes about feminism, religion, climate justice and LGBTI/faafafine/faatama in Oceania. She is an advocate for survivors of child sexual abuse and has written at length about family violence in Samoa.

The ACP Secretariat said of Young, "Through her, we wished to salute courage: this young journalist who writes for Samoa Planet, in fact openly denounces the vacillation of the major powers-that-be, which have been so slow to adopt urgent measures to tackle climate change.

Through her, we wished to commend the inventiveness of young people, who are capable of exploring the possibilities offered by the Internet to make themselves known, get published, communicate, exchange, change outlooks, and rattle positions. Using her blog “Sleepless in Samoa” and other online media, Lani Wendt Young shares all her experiences and adventures in self-publishing, with wholesome freshness, while encouraging young writers to take the plunge.

Through her, we wished to commend the young female author of a popular series, who is making reading attractive to a young audience, to whom she demonstrates that internationally known romance plots can be perfectly portrayed using Pacific references." [5]

References

  1. 1 2 Tapaleao, Vaimoana (2 April 2013). "Pacific books get youngsters reading". The New Zealand Herald.
  2. "Lani Wendt Young". Samoan Biographies. Retrieved 30 November 2017.
  3. Sharma, Shivani (15 July 2017). "Lani Young of Samoa Planet – a COP23 Journalism competition winner". Samoa Planet.
  4. "Young, Lani Wendt". New Zealand Book Council. Retrieved 7 December 2017.
  5. http://www.acp.int/content/acp-prize-women-and-youth-acp-secretariat-focuses-creativity-and-entrepreneurship-paris-book
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