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Amanda Swift

Children's writer

Amanda Swift writes children’s fiction, specialising in comedy. Her novels for nine- to 12-year-olds, The Boys’ Club, Big Bones and Anna/Bella, are all contemporary coming-of-age comedy dramas, while the series for five- to eight-year-olds she co-wrote with Jennifer Gray, Guinea Pigs Online and Puppies Online, are comedy adventures with an underlying message about the pros and cons of growing up in the internet age.

She has also written extensively for television: she was one of the original writers on My Parents are Aliens, lead writer on 24Seven and team writer on I Dream, all for Granada Kids. She has also written for the animated series Horrid Henry (Citv), Little Princess (Channel 5) and Guess with Jess (CBeebies), as well as dramatising Jacqueline Wilson’s The Dare Game and The Bed and Breakfast Star for radio.

Amanda taught the writing for children course at City University, London, which spawned the Finsbury Writing Group; she has also mentored new writers for children. Several of her ex-students are now widely published and prize-winning authors. She has an MA and a ProfGCE, is committed to facilitating creative writing in primary schools, and is a member of the National Association of Writers in Education. Other educational work has included teaching adult literacy at Lewisham College in south-east London, which is where she also lives. Her hobbies are long-distance walking and talking.

Amanda Swift has a ProfGCE in Literacy and taught at Lewisham FE College. She was RLF Fellow at the University of East London for five years, inaugural Fellow at London South Bank University and shared a Fellowship at Kingston University. She is committed to supporting a diverse cohort of multilingual and first generation students. As an RLF Consultant Fellow, she delivered academic writing workshops at UEL for multilingual postgraduates and staff. She has written fiction and non-fiction books, as well as for TV, radio and women’s magazines. She likes to bring a sense of fun to her teaching.

More from Amanda Swift

Amanda Swift|Amanda Swift

Amanda Swift

Children's writer

Posts

  • Kingston University, 2023–2023
  • London South Bank University, 2020–2021
  • University of East London, 2017–2018
  • University of East London, 2012–2014
  • University of East London, 2009–2011
  • Bridge Fellow