Medhanshi Chandel: A Young Poet Giving Adolescence Its Truest Voice

Most writers spend years learning how to express their emotions. Medhanshi Chandel began doing it long before she even realized it was a craft. At sixteen, while many teenagers struggle to articulate what they feel, she started shaping her emotions into poetry that speaks with honesty, depth, and unmistakable clarity. Her debut collection, I’m Just 16, stands as both a personal diary of growth and a powerful literary achievement that has earned her the Emily Dickinson 21st Century Award.
Teenage years are often described as confusing, overwhelming, and unpredictable. Medhanshi does not shy away from any of it. Instead, she turns the intensity of adolescence into finely drawn reflections. Love, heartbreak, fear, hope, confusion, identity, and the desire to understand oneself find their place in her writing. She captures these experiences not as dramatic events but as everyday emotions that shape who a young person becomes.
What makes I’m Just 16 remarkable is the way it balances vulnerability with strength. Each poem carries the raw honesty of someone trying to make sense of new experiences. At the same time, there is a quiet maturity in her voice, a sense of awareness that surprises the reader and stays with them long after the page is turned. The collection grows out of two years of writing, observing, questioning, and imagining. Some pieces come from the real world. Others grow from moments she created in her mind. Together, they form a portrait of a young girl learning to understand herself.
For Medhanshi, writing is not just expression. It is a way of grounding herself, especially during moments when life feels too overwhelming. She has said that writing offered her a place to be honest, vulnerable, and free. That intention shows in every line of the book. The poems create a space where readers, especially young readers, can see their own secrets, fears, and hopes reflected back at them.
Her achievement becomes even more striking when you consider her age. At seventeen, she brings a fresh and authentic voice to modern poetry. Her perspective is not shaped by long literary traditions but by lived moments, emotional clarity, and a natural instinct to question what she feels. That sincerity is what allows her work to resonate with people far beyond her age group, making her a strong emerging voice in contemporary poetry.
The Emily Dickinson 21st Century Award recognizes not only the promise she holds but also the accomplishment she has already demonstrated. It celebrates her ability to take the universal experiences of adolescence and present them with precision, sensitivity, and understanding. Through her poetry, Medhanshi reminds readers that age is never a barrier to depth, creativity, or emotional intelligence.
As she continues to grow as a writer, her foundation is already solid. I’m Just 16 proves that she understands the power of words and the importance of giving voice to the feelings young people often keep inside. Her work invites readers to pause, reflect, and remember the versions of themselves they once were.





