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Recess Game Becomes Award-Winning Story For Local Student

Photo by Amanda Stephens. Ariadne "Aria" Stephens loves reading fantasy novels. Her favorite series is called "The Unwanteds," by: Lisa McMann.
Photo by Amanda Stephens. Ariadne "Aria" Stephens loves reading fantasy novels. Her favorite series is called "The Unwanteds," by: Lisa McMann.

The hardest part of writing her story was cutting parts she really liked. But like any good writer, Ariadne "Aria" Stephens knew she had to make some tough calls. 

After a year of playing the made-up game "Flare, Shadow and Floof" on the playground, Aria had far too many adventures to fit into the writing assignment for the WHRO Young Storytellers Contest. So she had to make cuts -- including a part in which the queen dragon gives three good dragon eggs to the main characters Flare, Shadow and Floof. Aria says she may include that in follow up work. 

Aria won first place in the fourth-grade category of the contest when she attended school at Grafton Bethel Elementary School in Yorktown, Va. Now she has a new school and a new hometown. She attends St. Johnsbury School in St. Johnsbury, Vt., where her family recently moved during the COVID-19 pandemic. 

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

Listen to the conversation here:

Recess Game Becomes Award-Winning Story For Local Student

Hear Aria read her award-winning story:

Recess Game Becomes Award-Winning Story For Local Student

This transcript has been edited for clarity.

Rebecca Feldhaus Adams: Aria, cheers to you on your win, thank you so much for talking to me.

Aria Stephens: You're welcome.

RFA: What did you think when you found out that you won first place?

AS: I thought it was cool that a story that me and my friends played together at recess for the whole year, won first place in a writing contest because we were just a bunch of nine years, like, ‘Hey, this sounds cool, let's do this.’

RFA: So this was something that you came up with as a game before it was a story?

AS: Yes. Our game was called Flare, Shadow and Flood, because we are bad at making names for games. So we just did all of the characters.

RFA: How did you come up with those character names and which one of them did you play?

AS: I played Floof because I was a cat, and like we came up with them because first my two friends came up with the game that they were two sisters that crash landed on the secret magical island. And I watched them play and I was like, ‘Hey, what are you playing?’ And I was like, ‘Can I be your magical cat?’ So they already came up with Flare and Shadow because those with their powers, and I just came up with Floof because cat equals Floof.

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

AS: Yes, but I do like drawing more. I just like creating stories in my head and then sometimes I write them.

RFA: And this story, your winning story is called the Goddess Group. It's full of action. How did you know when your story was finished? Because you said you've been playing this game for a full year. How did you get it into one story?

AS: I cut out a lot because there was actually one part that was actually a big part interplaying story, and I didn't have enough time to read in there. But it was that that the Queen Dragon that they met at the start of the book actually gave them her three dragon eggs, which were like the last good dragons. So, like, I'm pretty sure it was Sunset, Riptide and Luna were their names.

RFA: And you also created your own digital illustrations for this story, which are really cool. How did you learn to do that type of artwork?

AS: I found out on YouTube that you can make moving pictures by yourself. And I thought, oh, that's cool. So I typed in animation App Store and what came up was a clip. So I looked at a clip and then I saw you could save, um, like different frames as pictures or start making pictures on that. And I still do that to this day.

RFA: What other types of things -- in addition to these sisters and Floof the cat -- have you written about?

AS: The first thing that comes to mind, and I don't know why this comes to mind, but in kindergarten, we had to do a fairy tale with a twist. So I did the three little wolves.

RFA: And who was the bad guy in that story?

AS: The big bad pig.

RFA: What else do you like to do for fun?

AS: I like to draw and I like to read books that professional people have made.

RFA: Arias Stephens, thank you so much for talking to me today. And again, congratulations.

AS: Thank you.

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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