A Tokoroa teenager has been included on Time鈥檚 first-ever 鈥淕irls of the Year鈥 list, five years after she began self-publishing her own book series.
Rutendo Shadaya, 17, was the only New Zealander among 10 girls named by the magazine as being 鈥減art of a generation that鈥檚 reshaping what leadership looks like today鈥.
Rutendo told Herald NOW鈥檚 Ryan Bridge it鈥檚 been 鈥渞eally amazing to see this progress鈥 since her first novel, Rachel and the Enchanted Forest, was published in 2020.
鈥淚鈥檝e faced ageism in my journey and I feel like seeing this starting from a small girl from a small town and going into ... hitting international stages is such an amazing achievement.
鈥淚 feel like it inspires many young people to go into writing or achieve their dreams because they see someone doing this.
鈥淭hey see 10 young girls representing them all over the world, and I feel like this is a good change ... because it encourages me and it empowers me to keep doing it.鈥
Rutendo began her literary career at 9 by creating a book for her best friend Sophie鈥檚 birthday, although she admitted she first 鈥渉ated writing because any subject I wasn鈥檛 good at I instantly just didn鈥檛 like鈥.
鈥淎t the same time, my friend鈥檚 birthday was coming up and I knew she loved writing. She had a book club with her friends and they would read stories and stuff,鈥 Rutendo said.
鈥淚 didn鈥檛 know what to write, but I wrote based on what I watched on TV, the books I read ... through that, it took me two months to write this first draft and I completed it two days after my [10th] birthday.鈥
Having been so young, Rutendo faced barriers to realising her book in its final published form and had to convince her parents just how serious she was.
鈥淏ut after getting them on board, this journey took two years and I managed to give my friend her birthday present two years late in November.
鈥淪ince then, I decided writing isn鈥檛 that bad after all. And then I self-published two books later on.鈥
Author Rutendo Shadaya, 17, from Tokoroa, has been named on Time's first "Girls of the Year" list. Photo / @rutendos_books
Rutendo鈥檚 fantasy series follows the magical protagonist Rachel as she navigates her newfound powers and learns how to use them in the enchanted city for good.
The Waikato teen draws inspiration for the series from her friendships, her Zimbabwe-New Zealand heritage, and things that pique her interest in her daily life.
鈥淪ometimes I鈥檒l be watching something or reading something, like maybe an article, [and] I鈥檒l make it based on a fantasy type of idea,鈥 she said.
鈥淪ometimes I base it on interactions and I鈥檓 like, 鈥極h, I could add ... that characteristic into one of my book characters鈥.鈥
Despite having three titles already under her belt, Rutendo plans to treat writing as a side hustle after finishing school.
鈥淚鈥檓 planning to do something in sciences ... I don鈥檛 want to make writing my full-time because ... I want to have it as a passion still.鈥
Other people who secured a spot on Time鈥檚 list include 16-year-old pilot Defne 脰zcan, who is the youngest Turkish person ever to fly solo, and 15-year-old Japanese Olympic gold medallist Coco Yoshizawa.
Time senior editor Dayan Sarkisova said she sought to find 10 girls from around the world 鈥渨ho challenged stereotypes, tackled problems head-on, and sought to build solutions from the ground up鈥.
鈥淲omen now make up over half of all students enrolled in tertiary education worldwide, and these young women are pursuing careers in engineering, technology, and innovation at record rates,鈥 Sarkisova wrote.
鈥淭heir generation understands that change doesn鈥檛 require waiting for adulthood - it starts with seeing problems and refusing to accept them as permanent.鈥
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