logo
Minecraft fan wins Latitude festival poetry competition for kids

Minecraft fan wins Latitude festival poetry competition for kids

BBC Newsa day ago

A seven-year-old Minecraft fan has a won a festival poetry competition for children.Myles, from Wymondham, Norfolk, wrote A Friend Like Steve, which he will get to perform on stage to open this year's Latitude festival at Henham Park, Suffolk, on 24 July.Judge and poet Luke Wright said: "I love the fact he chose the language he feels comfortable with, the language of Minecraft. The best thing to do is write about something you love, which is why this is so excellent."The competition was run in partnership with the BBC, and open to seven to 11-year-olds in Suffolk, Norfolk and Cambridgeshire.
Myles' mother, Charlotte, said: "I'm so proud of him, it came out beautifully. "Myles' dad listens to the radio, so he heard about the competition and mentioned it to Myles - who was probably playing Minecraft at the time!"If he's not playing it, he's wearing it or talking about it.. he's quite the fanatic."Myles said he worked on the poem for two days.
Poetry 'essential to the festival'
The competition began for the 2024 festival as a collaboration with BBC Radio Suffolk, and was open just to young people who lived or went to school in Suffolk.It expanded to cover three counties for this year's festival.Melvin Benn, founder of the Latitude Festival, said: "Myles' poem is delightful and shows why this competition is so important."At just seven years old, he's taken the world of Minecraft, something that truly speaks to his generation, and turned it into a beautiful exploration of friendship and shared adventure. "This is exactly what Latitude is all about: celebrating creativity in all its forms, giving a platform to new voices."This year will also see a bigger input from the BBC Music Introducing teams which cover Suffolk and Norfolk, and Cambridgeshire and Essex, with 21 local acts performing on the Lavish Lounge stage.
Poems on the theme of friendship were judged by BBC presenters Sarah Lilley and Louise Hulland, along with poet Luke Wright and Latitude arts curator Kirsty Taylor. Two runners up were also chosen and invited to read their pieces at the festival alongside the winner.Zara, 11, from Gorleston, wrote What Can I Do? telling the story of her school friend moving away to Peterborough."Two hours is far too long, it might as well be two years," she wrote.Eleanor, 11, from Cromer, wrote Someone, a poem that explored how it felt to be without a special friend."Friends are the family you choose, but I've not yet been found," Eleanor wrote.
BBC Radio Suffolk presenter Sarah Lilley said: "The entries this year took the judges on a rollercoaster of emotions, with some of the pieces showing real maturity about different aspects of having friends, being a friend and sometimes, missing or not having friends."I was so impressed with all of them, but our three finalists are exceptional."Charlotte Spackman, BBC Suffolk executive producer said: "To be able to give young people from our region such an amazing opportunity to take to the stage at Latitude is really special."Creativity is one of the BBC's core values, and it is essential we play our part in nurturing, developing and sharing the stories of the huge talent we have in the East."Watch last year's winner, 11 year old Anna, perform via BBC Suffolk's Facebook pageThe Latitude Festival is 24 - 27 July 2025 at Henham Park, Suffolk, with Sting, Snow Patrol and Fatboy Slim headlining.
Follow Suffolk news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Race Across the World: Caroline and Tom planning further travels
Race Across the World: Caroline and Tom planning further travels

BBC News

time6 hours ago

  • BBC News

Race Across the World: Caroline and Tom planning further travels

Warning: This article reveals the winners of Race Across the World. A mother and son who appeared on Race Across the World together have revealed they are saving up to go on more adventures BBC One show saw five pairs of contestants race a distance of about 8,700 miles (14,000km) between the Great Wall of China, north of Beijing, and Kanniyakumari, the southernmost tip of India. Caroline and Tom Bridge, from Hargrave, near Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk, were first to cross the finish line after 51 days of the morning after the final was aired, Ms Bridge said: "It has brought us closer, we now try and have a bit more time for each other." The 60-year-old, who had not been travelling before, said it had been "amazing" to relive the experience by watching the series air, but the trip itself "took its toll". "You're so tired, so dirty, so hungry and you really feel like you've got nothing left in the tank but you just have to keep plodding on so it really was amazing," she victory came despite having a slow start to the race, finishing the first leg in last place."We were a day and a half [behind], we couldn't believe how slow we were," Ms Bridge said."We got stuck in Beijing. From the very first out we were so behind we had to dig deep."We went from fifth back to first." Ms Bridge said the experience had strengthened the relationship between mother and son."We now try and have a bit more time for each other," she said. "We actually make time to stop and enjoy the simple things together and we are hoping to go travelling again."While the pair's next adventure is still in the planning process, they know for sure that this time they will have a mobile phone, something which is prohibited on the show."Tom is back working and we are hoping to save up and plan to go to Kazakhstan with rucksacks but obviously with a phone this time and see what takes our fancy."It will just be the two of us because we like to walk and be impulsive and we don't mind roughing it." While Ms Bridge spoke to BBC Radio Suffolk about the pair's win, son Tom opted for a lie-in. However, upon reaching the finish line, the 21-year-old said he had "never been prouder" of his said: "It's a pretty good feeling. I am lost for words I can't believe it."Fifty-one days racing through countries that I never thought I'd go to, I never thought we'd come this far, I never thought we'd achieve so much and I've never been prouder of my mum - she got me through it." Follow Suffolk news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X.

No escaping mother: Lili is Crying, bv Hélène Bessette, reviewed
No escaping mother: Lili is Crying, bv Hélène Bessette, reviewed

Spectator

time15 hours ago

  • Spectator

No escaping mother: Lili is Crying, bv Hélène Bessette, reviewed

'Everyone has a mother, but we don't all smash up our lives for her sake,' we hear in the first few pages of Lili is Crying. It's a sensible message, but one which seems suited to an entirely different book. Hélène Bessette's 1953 debut novel – translated into English for the first time – is a tale of bust-ups, mistakes and life-ruining decisions in a fiery, fickle relationship between a mother and daughter. Charlotte and her daughter Lili live in Provence, and the novel jumps between the 1930s and 1940s, from Lili's 'ribbons and Sunday dresses' to her first freighted dalliances with boys. Charlotte runs a boarding house from which Lili longs to escape – and nearly manages to, with the same young man who tries to convince her not to destroy her life for her mother. His honesty is his mistake, and Lili fails to leave for him – eventually 'going off' not with 'the man I do love' but instead 'with the man I don't'. Her flight ends in failure – there are disappointments and a backstreet abortion – and it isn't long before she is back with Charlotte. The two stay together while Lili's husband, a Slav, is interned in Dachau for the duration of the war. Bessette's prose is prickly and snappy, with short lines and speech introduced by dashes. On the page it looks more like verse than prose, an effect which matches Bessette's take on the 'poetic novel'. Yet the style is even less defined than this suggests. The action is narrated by everyone and no one. Even the house in Provence has a voice, resentful, complaining: 'Naturally, they slam my doors. What do they care if my doors are damaged?' There is also a mysterious, ever-present shepherd. The effect is one of a verse drama, with a mocking chorus in the wings. People's ages change and remain the same, defying chronology. This is a novel with no regard for anything as stuffy as the traditional passing of time. In 1953, Bessette – a 35-year-old divorcée and teacher at an école maternelle – was hailed as someone radical. Gallimard signed her up for a ten-book deal; Marguerite Duras called her the very definition of 'living literature'. Yet the early acclaim failed to sustain her career. When she died in 2000, all 13 of her novels were out of print. Perhaps Lili is Crying – a story of unachieved dreams and the pain of continuing to hope – will be the one to revive her reputation.

Loading a dishwasher is more exciting than David Tennant's quiz show
Loading a dishwasher is more exciting than David Tennant's quiz show

The Herald Scotland

time17 hours ago

  • The Herald Scotland

Loading a dishwasher is more exciting than David Tennant's quiz show

* Squid Game, the South Korean dystopian thriller about a fight-to-the-death contest to win millions, starts its third and final season at the end of June. Whatever grisly trials the makers have concocted, they will have to go some to beat the horror of watching David Tennant's Genius Game try to come alive. Like Frankenstein's monster, its creators have hit it with everything, including a prime time slot, all to no avail. You could go old school and blame the state of UK education. A test of intelligence rather than general knowledge, Genius Game has been a hit in its home country of South Korea. Yet Lee Mack's The 1% Club takes the same tack, and the four million-plus ratings show audiences are comfortable with that. So what was the problem with Genius Game? For a start, the games were ridiculously complicated and poorly explained. As someone who took an age to get their head round Pointless ('What, the aim is to score as little as possible?'), I'm reluctant to throw that particular stone, but needs must. The problems were there to see in the final, where Ken took on Charlotte to win the £44,000 prize. It was an odd sum, but then everything about Genius Game has been peculiar. Read more Ken and Charlotte slogged through a series of 'death matches', with contestants from previous episodes coming back to help, as in The Apprentice, The Traitors, and many other shows. Not that the also-rans had much to do except sit on a sofa in another part of the set and try to talk up the tension. 'This is nerve-wracking,' said one as Ken or Charlotte made another move in a game that made no sense. It was about as nerve-wracking as watching someone load the dishwasher. The contestants can't be blamed for the boredom. It's not strictly their job to sparkle, though it would have helped enormously. It was up to Tennant to bring the party, and he didn't. Given the grand title of 'The Creator', his part in proceedings was limited to sitting in another room, isolated from the contestants, and chipping in the odd comment now and then. Tennant can usually do that kind of thing in his sleep; here he seemed to be between naps. Back in the final, Ken and Charlotte were using special 'advantages' bestowed on them by the ex-contestants. Just what we needed, more faffing for zero reward. 'I'd like to invalidate his appeal,' said Charlotte. Was she talking about the game or Tennant? Ken was having a nice time, so that was something. He declared one match to be 'very exciting', giving it 'eight out of ten on the Ken-ometer'. Maybe the Ken-ometer should have been incorporated into the game: it couldn't have made things any more boring. Finally, we had a winner. By this point I was doing the dusting just to stay awake. Still in his attic, Tennant readied himself for the big finish, such as it was. 'What a ride!' he said. 'For now, I shall bid you farewell!' For now? What a ride? I don't know what quiz show Tennant was watching, but if he expects a second series of Genius Game he may have a long wait.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store