The Shortlist Sessions 3

Delighted to be back with the third instalment of The Shortlist Sessions, featuring two more of our Book Edit Writers' Prize shortlisted writers.

This week we’re spotlighting two fabulous writers: Kiah Olowu and Kiah Simpson.

Kiah Olowu

Kiah Olowu is a writer from East London who writes across long fiction, short fiction, and script. Her writing reflects on modern-day society from her perspective as a young Black woman, and addresses unignorable issues like homelessness, racism, and gentrification.

Infection

Set in today’s London, and inspired by true events, Infection follows three individuals after racism becomes categorised as a mental illness with therapy being the proposed ‘cure.’

Kiah Simpson

Kiah Simpson is a charity worker and writer living in Buckinghamshire. Through her stories, she explores the cultural identity and lives of Black women in romance. Living with fibromyalgia and bipolar disorder, Kiah is passionate about bringing more positive and authentic disability representation to the page.

Unwritten Ending

Nearly-thirty and newly jobless Olive Gordon moves back into her grandparents’ house determined to rebuild her life. But when her first love reappears with old journals, new boundaries, and a secret, Olive has to face her own fears about love, failure and the messiness of starting over.

We hope you enjoyed finding out more about these two talented authors!

Next week we’ll hear from our final two shortlisted writers to wrap up our spotlight on these voices of the future.


The Shortlist Sessions 2

We're back with the second instalment of The Shortlist Sessions, and today we're delighted to introduce two more of our Book Edit Writers' Prize shortlisted writers.

This week we’re featuring Matthew Fothergill and Susannah Jong-Sook Bond. 

Matthew Fothergill

Matthew Fothergill is an emerging literary and historical fiction writer from North Yorkshire, where Captain Cook was born and first went to sea. Drawing on his sailing experience and work with the Royal Navy, he explores endurance, memory, and moral complexity in his debut novel Spirit of Endeavour.

Spirit of Endeavour

Spirit of Endeavour reimagines Captain James Cook’s first Pacific voyage as a mythic, psychological odyssey. Blending maritime realism with lyrical prose, it examines empire, memory, and the moral cost of exploration through an ensemble cast – while Indigenous perspectives, deeply human and transformative, recast discovery as reckoning and turn survival into shared understanding.

Instagram @mdf_writing

Susannah Jong-Sook Bond

Susannah is a Korean foundling, adopted by an English family. She has completed the Curtis Brown six-month novel course and is now on the Jericho Writers Ultimate Novel Course. She was shortlisted for the Jericho Writers Friday Night Live 2025 and came in the top 100 of the Cheshire Novel Prize 2025.

When the Cherry Blossom Falls

Set in 1964 post-war Korea, a noblewoman abandons her illegitimate baby at a police station expecting she’ll be adopted abroad, but a police officer takes the infant home to his wife, passing it off as their own. The child grows up just doors away unaware her origins must be guarded to keep her family safe while the noblewoman must decide whether to claim her daughter and ruin her position in society or watch others raise her.

Instagram @susannahjsbond

We hope you enjoy this latest edition of the Shortlist Sessions. Stay tuned next week for two more fabulously talented writers.

The Shortlist Sessions

We're kicking off 2026 with something special: introducing the Writers' Prize shortlisted writers. Over the next few weeks, we'll be bringing you closer to these brilliant voices, sharing readings from the work that made our shortlist. Each writer has carved out their own unique space on the page – prepare to be impressed!

First up we have Javaria Akbar and Emma Conally-Barklem.

Javaria Akbar

Javaria Akbar is British Asian freelance food writer and mum of three. She grew up in Bradford to Pakistani immigrant parents but now lives in Surrey. She has a masters in magazine journalism and has contributed to Vice, Refinery29, The Pool, Hyphen, Delish and more, alongside content writing and blogging.

Ingredients

When introvert Imaan is widowed after an arranged marriage, she is forced to come out of her shell and ends up falling for her divorced brother-in-law Veed.

Instagram @curryology

Emma Conally-Barklem

Emma Conally-Barklem is an author, poet and yoga teacher based in Yorkshire. Emma won the Black in White Poetry Prize 2024. She is the author of three pamphlets. She was a core poet for the BBC’s Contains Strong Language Poetry Festival 2025 and a guest on Radio 4’s Front Row. Emma won the First Chapter Award 2025. Yoga Homicide is her first novel.

Yoga Homicide

Three queer modern women, one ancient spiritual practice, who holds the knife? Less Eat, Pray, Love, more watch your back and be careful what you wish for. Spiritual when wearing the right brands, Yoga Homicide is pacy, sexy and ultimately deadly. In a world where you can be anything, be ruthless.

Contact Emma:

Email: emmaliveyoga@gmail.com 

Instagram @emmaliveyoga

We hope you enjoyed listening to our first Shortlist Session writers as much as we did! Next week, we’ll hear from two more.

If you’d like to find out more about how we help writers, do get in touch at info@thebookedit.co.uk, or browse our website for more information on our services. And hit the button below if you want to be informed about the 2026 Writers’ Prize.