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Local Student Writer Scores Prize With Tale 'The New York Penguin'

Photo by Juliemarie Vander Burg. Norfolk student Jack Vander Burg says he didn't have to do too much research for his story, because he's been paying attention to what climate change is doing to the world's wildlife.
Photo by Juliemarie Vander Burg. Norfolk student Jack Vander Burg says he didn't have to do too much research for his story, because he's been paying attention to what climate change is doing to the world's wildlife.

For Jack Vander Burg, writing has to contend with other pandemic pastimes like playing video games and riding his exercise bike. He's eager to start back to work on a fantasy story he's been working on. But he took time off to write prose about climate change. And it won him a prize.

Jack is the second place winner in the fifth grade category of the 2020 WHRO Young Storytellers Contest. Now enrolled at young scholars program at Rosemont Middle School, he wrote his winning essay during his time at Larchmont Elementary School. Jack and his family live in Norfolk.

The story highlights the perils of climate change through the eyes of an orphan penguin. Jack says he didn't have to do much research for the story, outside names of organizations and their leaders, because he's been paying attention to news about the issue. He says his favorite part of the story is that the main character, Pingo, volunteers to find help for the penguin colony suffering from the melting ice. Pingo's parents died because of melting ice, and he doesn't want anyone else to go through his pain.

WHRO News Director Rebecca Feldhaus Adams spoke with three of the winners of the 2020 contest, including Jack. 

Listen to the conversation here:

Local Student Writer Scores Prize With Tale 'The New York Penguin'

Hear Jack read his award-winning story:

This transcript has been edited for clarity.

Rebecca Feldhaus Adams: Jack, congratulations and thank you so much for joining me today. Thank you for having me. How do you feel about your win?

Jack Vander Burg: When my mom showed me the letter, I was a bit surprised, like I wasn't expecting to win at all because I sort of paused writing it when COVID hit.

So I wasn't really thinking it was going to do good.

RFA: And then once you got over the surprise, how does it feel?

JVB: I was really happy and just excited.

RFA: Tell me about your experience writing. Is writing something you do a lot?

JVB: I enjoy writing and I do it often, but not like when I’m bored, I start just writing, it’s not that often.

RFA: What kinds of things inspire you to write what's going on with the world?

JVB: Just whatever my mind is thinking about stuff like that.

RFA: Your story is called “The New York Penguin”. Briefly, describe, for the folks listening, what your story is about.

JVB: It is about a penguin that leaves his home of Antarctica to go to New York and try and get people to come back and help save him and his friends from the melting ice.

RFA: And we'll leave the audience in suspense as to what happens so they can go online and read the whole story. Why did you want to write about penguins? Why did you choose that to write about?

JVB: Because the topic was climate change. And the first thing that came to mind was melting ice. And I thought penguins live on ice.

RFA: And what was the most important thing you wanted people to take away from reading your story?

JVB: That the ice is melting and that we have to do something. It's not just like the penguins are going to do it themselves.

RFA: What kind of research went into writing your story?

JVB: Not much at all, actually. I did some research, though, on like some of the characters and organizations in it. But besides that, nothing really.

RFA: What do you like most about “The New York penguin?”

JVB: The fact that he was so determined to go help people because his parents were killed in the melting ice, so he was like really determined to go help other people, so it didn’t happened to anyone else.

RFA: You said you write from time to time. What other hobbies, especially during COVID, do you fill your time with?

JVB: I ride the exercise bike. I read and play video games.

RFA: What kind of video games are you into?

JVB: I'm into to like sort of like just peaceful build games.

RFA: So, Jack, what do you want to write about next after your big success?

JVB: I don't know. I might go back to sort of doing like these fantasy things like these, like otherworldly spirits come and like guide people to fight, or there's this alternate universe that's trying to take over the one that we’re in.

RFA: That sounds like a lot’s at stake in that story.

JVB: Yeah.

RFA: It sounds a little stressful.

JVB: Not really, because I know that I can always change it if I get to stress.

RFA: What advice do you have for people who might be listening to this and who want to do their own writing?

JVB: Just let your imagination take you wherever it does and write it on it.

RFA: Well, Jack Vanderburg, thank you so much for being with us today. And again, congratulations.

JVB: Thank you for having me.

Rebecca (Bec) Fedhaus Adams is the first ever news director at WHRO Public Media. She leads the strategic vision for local journalism. Bec is an alumna of the Poynter Leadership Academy for Women in Media (2019) and a member of the Editorial Integrity and Leadership Initiative (2020) from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting and the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism. She is an outspoken advocate for diversity in public media and mentors young journalists to reach their goals. She is a member of the 2020 Next Generation Radio staff. Her work is driven by a conviction that the way we do our work is as important as the work we do, and that curiosity and humility are the cornerstones of that philosophy. She has served as an editor and project manager at WAMU in Washington, D.C., the talent director at the Association of Independents in Radio (AIR), a general assignment reporter at WKMS, an education reporter at The Paducah Sun and a freelancer and consultant. Bec's stories and collaborations have won multiple state, regional and national awards including in the "Best Use of Sound," category for a story about an evangelical horse whisperer. She holds two degrees from Murray State University. A homesick Kentuckian, Bec has been named both a roller derby MVP and Miss Congeniality in past lives. She lives in Virginia Beach with her spouse, Drew. When she’s not at work, she enjoys karaoke, hosting dinner parties and traveling.

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