Books

Ontario teens Claire Bisch, Leila Djuric win The First Page student writing challenge

CBC Books asked students across Canada to write the first page of a novel set 150 years in the future, imagining how a current-day trend or issue has played out. About 1,000 students submitted their stories in this year's contest.

The winners will receive a one-year OwlCrate subscription and 50 books for their school libraries

A composite image of portraits of two teenage girls.
Claire Bisch and Leila Djuric, both from Ontario, are the winners of the 2025 First Page student writing challenge. (Submitted by Claire Bisch and Leila Djuric)

Canadian teens Claire Bisch and Leila Djuric have won The First Page student writing challenge for 2025.

Students from across the country imagined how current events and trends — from artificial intelligence and climate change to cloning and war — have played out in the year 2175.

The 21 finalists and eventual winners were chosen from about 1,000 entries.

Bestselling YA author S.K. Ali was this year's The First Page judge. Ali selected the 2025 winners from two shortlists — one from each age category.

Author portrait of a South Asian woman in a beige hijab.
S.K. Ali is a Toronto writer of YA novels, including her latest sci-fi, Fledgling. (Kokila Penguin Young Readers Group, S.K. Ali)

Claire Bisch, 14, a student at Kitchener-Waterloo Collegiate and Vocational School in Waterloo, Ont., is the winner in the Grades 7 to 9 category for You Will Not Remember. The story is about climate change and government corruption.

"In You Will Not Remember, deft, tense writing anchors us quickly in the room with the protagonist, communicating her place in a world we immediately understand," said Ali.

"The story presents us with a conflict that will undoubtedly awaken a hero we want to follow into this story promising action, internal growth, and resonant themes for our world."

Bisch spoke about what it means to win the contest.

"Thank you so much to the CBC for giving this opportunity to young writers. I am truly grateful for being shortlisted and for being chosen as the winner by S.K. Ali. Congratulations to all the other finalists!" she said.

A portrait of a teenage girl with glasses and braces smiling into the camera.
Claire Bisch is the winner of the 2025 First Page Student writing challenge in the Grades 7 to 9 category. (Submitted by Claire Bisch)

The 14-year-old also spoke about how she approached the challenge. 

"I've been reading a lot of dystopian novels lately and was inspired to write something in the genre for The First Page Contest. My approach was to portray a post-climate-change world where the lead character learns that everything she thought she knew was a lie, but that there's this glimmer of hope in the image of the plants." 

Djuric, 17, a student at Rosedale Heights School of The Arts in Toronto, is the winner in the Grades 10 to 12 category for Digital Silence. The story is about AI taking over social media.

"Digital Silence features beautiful writing — balancing action and elegantly-captured internal processing — gradually stirring questions we want answered," Ali said about the winning entry.

"We just know we'll be carried into a story promising sophisticated themes, a sublime storyline and a likeable, [activated] hero." 

A portrait of a teenage girl laughing while facing the left of the frame.
Leila Djuric is the winner of the 2025 First Page student writing challenge in the Grades 10 to 12 category. (Submitted by Leila Djuric)

Djuric spoke about what winning this contest means.

"I'm so grateful to have my work recognized by a massive media outlet like CBC, it's incredibly validating as a young creator," the teen told CBC Books. 

The 17-year-old also spoke about her approach to crafting a first page.

"I planned out how a full story with my idea would (roughly) go from start to finish. Once I had that in my mind, I was able to work backwards. I wrote the first page with foreshadowing for a larger story that I may never write, but it was a captivating challenge nonetheless."

Both winners will receive one year of OwlCrate, a monthly book subscription service, and 50 books for each of their school libraries. 

You can read the shortlisted entries below.

Grades 7 to 9 category finalists

Grades 10 to 12 category finalists

Last year's winners were Toronto's Anya Thadani in the Grades 7 to 9 category for Fixed and Kleefeld, Man's Hayley Peters in the Grades 10 to 12 for Forbidden Realities.

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