She`s ignoring my call
Transcription
She`s ignoring my call
2014 – 2015 Mason High School Writers’ Block Staff: Cameron Albers Maya Malaviya Sneha Ameya Nicole Markley Yana Artemov Jhenae Martin Amani Ashraf Megan McAneny Nicole Baah Kamala Mullur Katelyn Bill Reanna Nartker Nina Bredemeier Madelyn Paraskos Jessie Dibb Ishani Paul Allison Dreyer Melissa Phillips Mallory Elder Sneha Rajan Katelyn Emter Allison Ridener Catherine Gong Stephanie Schoenlein Ramya Gutta Sarah Senne Katie Hibner Jessica Sommerville Tanvi Jagtap Rachel Stapleton Mallory Johnson Divya Takkellapati Frances Kraimer Joice Thekkethottiyil Aniya Longmire Kelly Tran Sierra Longmire Radhika Upadhye Advisor: Mrs. Amanda Bross Writers’ Block would also like to give a special thanks to the Mason High School Art Department, especially Mr. Aaron Roberts, for their support and assistance with the artwork portion of the magazine. Thank you to the 2014 – 2015 Creative Writing I and II classes and to all others who submitted their work for publication. Magic By Nicole Baah She remembered, Long, long ago, When the magic began. She teleported, Able to weave in and out of dimensions, Unbound by the limits of space and time. She lived, Never feeling trapped by walls, For they could simply be melted with the mind. She traveled, Whisking away to far lands, Where time was never of the essence. She imagined, Creating new worlds, But kept them her own ever treasured Then she learned, Willing to share her power, Transferring fantasies to anyone who dared dream. But she faded, Losing her brilliant force, Instead drowned by her overwhelming reality. ... He listens, Captured in wonder & awe, As the woman spins vibrant tales of adventure. She watches, Smile washed with reminisce As her old love of magic will forever endure. Magic by Nicole Baah Art out of Self-Doubt by Katie Hibner Every time I wallpaper my watershed so it transpires and peels into pamphlets that stir the salmon to insurrection a salty stroke against a sled husky’s grain— tug at the root of the current and there is a paper biplane swimmer I pulley him up into the shadow box and swat my flipper to repel the pterodactyl cloud, it may be studded with FDA approval but declare We don’t want your extinction coat. Teardrop Slab by Madison McConkie The Magic Telescope: A Children’s Story By Sierra and Aniya Longmire Ring, Ring, Ring, “Kaylee, go to the door, it must be Emily and Zach!” Mom yells across the room while she fixes dinner. I sprint to the brown wooden door. I open it to be immediately greeted with the whiff of the autumn breeze that satisfies my nose. My neighborhood friends greet me with a huge hug. I can’t wait for them to see my new tree house. “Wow, this is an amazing tree house. It looks so cool!” Rising France by Alyssa Evans Zach says, his eyes are glimmering in amazement. The tree house had been sitting sturdy, in the old tree that has been in my backyard for over 20 years. There are a bunch of comfy bean bags and board games like checkers but best of all, there was this awesome telescope... “What’s this?” asks Emily “Oh, it’s a telescope used to see objects far away,” I begin to explain, “My dad told me that it could take all of my worries and fears away, kind of like my teddy bear but only better! “That’s neat!” Emily says with enthusiasm. “Can I touch it, Kaylee?” Zach asks. I shrug my shoulders. My dad had always told me to use it only when I truly needed it but it won’t hurt to try with my best friends, right? We race to the telescope all at once, and I look through the clear lens. “My dad said to count to three, so let’s try it!” “One, Two, Three!” we say together. We open our eyes and the sight of a large desert with wild animals, giraffes, elephants, monkeys, zebras and more, roaming about startles us. Looking to the right, we see a bunch of tourists riding in safari Jeep, admiring the view of Mother Nature’s beauty. Looking to the left, we see a lake where hippos are bathing. “Where are we?” sighs Zach with a faint look on his face. Emily answers Zach, “In an African safari. I learned about the Savannah Deserts in school!” “...But how did we get here?” he asked. “I guess it’s because of the telescope.” I say as my vision comes into focus. We begin to explore and we spot a giraffe protecting its baby from a lion. As we see the amazing yet natural instinct occur, the hot sun blazes on our skin. I look into the distance of the desert and I see my telescope. “Look, guys that’s my telescope from my tree house. C’mon!” When we reach it, we investigate it to see how this telescope could have possibly transported us all the way to Africa from home. “What if we count to three again? It might take us back to your backyard, Kaylee,” suggests Emily. “One, Two, Three!” I wake up. It felt like I was in a dream but somehow we had ended up in London! I look around as my vision clears up from being blurry. I see beautiful tall buildings that look old and ancient. The Palace of Westminster stands sturdily right in front of me. In front of the gates, I see tall men in red uniforms. I go over and tap the shoulder of one; because they looked as if they were statues. He didn’t blink at all. My father I look over to see Zach and Emily standing at what I was right, think is my telescope. the telescope I run over and join them to see what other place the telescope did take all would take us to next. my worries “One, Two, Three!” we say again, as our voices and fears harmonize. away. The Eiffel Tower in Paris, France overlooks Emily, Zach, and me. The smell of French baguettes make me hungry. “Kaylee, let’s go explore the Eiffel Tower, come on!” We all run across the soft green grass towards the ancient tower from 1889. The first floor takes you back to the construction of the Eiffel Tower and makes you feel as if you were there. The lift takes us one floor up and there we see old photos, gift shops, and an amazing view. Our next stop takes us to the third floor. Looking through the windows, we are able to look down at the beautiful view of Paris. The telescope appears and we walk towards it. “I’m starting to get tired, are you?” I start to yawn and we look into the telescope one last time. “One, Two, Three!” Before I know it, I’m lying in my bed, ready to go to sleep. It was such a day to remember. Seeing the beautiful countries all around the world with my best friends is something I wouldn’t trade for the world! My father was right, the telescope did take all my worries and fears away. While falling asleep, my dreams include my amazing adventures. By Andrew Caudill As I watch all who fall around me We paint them as heroes But really they are victims Victims of this cruel world Victims of their forced environment Memorials are erected Endless moments of silence are offered They do not see the errors in their ways Mass production of children drones No personal connection available Those who are gone wanted to be free Leaving us feeling more imprisoned Resentment grows; sides are drawn Look what it has come to Sides taking up arms against each other I refuse to take a side It all really depends; Who the lesser of the two evils are That, unfortunately, is what it has come to Ethereal by Kate Mroczka Bitter Winter by Lily Hopkins Fairy Tale Forest by Amani Ashraf Secluded from everything amongst this ghostly blanket of wonder. Leaving you hopeless, Deprived from the world. You become breathless. Losing your state of mind. The dark winters loneliness right beside you. The tree stands Silently, the wind blows. The snowflakes tapping, like fingers on a wooden desk. Hitting the frozen over window. You watch them fall to your fingertips. realizing you are trapped. and you wonder if you can ever Escape. The One and Only Carolyn Messer My name was something from the time before us. It was given to me from both my grandmothers. My first name from Grandma Jane’s middle name and my middle name from Grandma Irene’s first name. My parents sure thought they were clever. I was to grow up a delicate, quiet, knee-length sundress on a summer day kind of girl. My name was fit for a classic lace-filled painting. A vintage, throwback, old-timey name. But for a while, I refused to accept that. It was too long for me. Too sophisticated, like a snooty poodle with its powdered pink nose stuck straight into the air and a bow tied around its neck. I didn’t want to be put together and prim like my name made me out to be. So I wasn’t. I refused to keep my hair in place, would dress to defy my mother’s pokes and prods, and never became that quiet, peaceful, calm person that my name portrayed. So I got nicknames. Lindsey-bin, for only my dad when I was the little monster running around the house causing chaos and laughter between my siblings. “I’m gonna getchyou Lindsey-bin!” he’d scream with a playful growl and bit of laughter. Care, for everyday use that anyone who was close enough to see the pig-tailed, wild child I was. And Carebear, for my silly friends that found themselves hilarious at their ‘original’ name. “I have an idea!” it always started, “We’ll call you Carebear!” and then laughter exploded throughout our little mouths. But it always crept back, that Carolyn Irene… The heaviness of my name came in the time of anger. When I stomped my way into the house, arms folded, brow furrowed. Frustrated at the things not going my way. It came in a time of sorrow. When the gentle coo of my mother’s familiar, loving voice soothed the bitter tears the left tracks on my dirt-covered cheeks. It came in the time of consequences. When I cringed and hid from the angry footsteps bounding my way. It always came back. And I slowly realized that my name was mine. Not Grandma Irene’s or Grandma Jane’s. Of course I admired their wisdom, their independence, and their laughter. But I did not have to be them. So I had to learn. My name did not just have to be one thing. I could make my name however I wanted it to be. Because my name was given to me so I had the ability to create something new with it. It was never meant to create me. So that’s where I started. Started creating, and learning, and growing. The one and only, Carolyn Irene Messer. Different Colors By Amani Ashraf The Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution: Rights and Responsibilities of the Red Guard (An Excerpt) Catherine Gong “Revolutionary leaders are not gods, but human beings; [we] cannot worship them like gods or refuse to allow people to point out and correct their errors just because they are great; neither can we totally repudiate them and erase their historical feats just because they made mistakes…” -- Chinese President Xi Jinping W hen one examines the history of a country, great ages stand out. Some periods shine with triumph, others bow in defeat. Influential people are born. They make their mark and die, living on only in the memories of adoring followers, leaving nothing but actions, some of them mistakes, for the scrutiny of critics. Revolution and Red Guard organization in an attempt to gain popular support. Throughout the Cultural Revolution, the rights delegated to the Red Guard by Mao Zedong greatly influenced the views of the Guard members regarding their personal societal responsibilities. The changed views of these perhaps wrongly empowered youth also significantly swayed their cultural perspective of superiors and elders. The Chinese Cultural Revolution was A revolution is difficult to begin, and once originally launched in an effort to save Mao Zedong and initiated, almost impossible to control; those that try are his reputation. As it concluded, however, it was clear that usually torn down. They are the results were far beyond what any often the result of the “A revolution is difficult to single person could predict. Effects of human tendency toward begin, and once initiated, the Cultural Revolution continue to power; the results are almost impossible to control…” ring through modern China, and the powerful waves of change, events and people will forever play a both positive and negative, that ricochet throughout part in Chinese history. society. A pristine historical example is of the cultural issues in late twentieth century China. Following the failed When Mao Zedong and the Communist Party of Great Leap Forward, Mao Zedong, Chairman of the China (CPC) commissioned the supposed ‘Great Leap Communist Party of China, was quickly losing power and Forward’ in 1958, none anticipated the economic failure thus desperately invoked the Great Proletarian Cultural that ensued. It ended in 1960 with food shortages, some caused by natural disasters, a lack of raw materials as well action of the Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution. These as poor-quality production followed. Mao, charged with points supposedly addressed and categorized the enemies the largest responsibility, was forced to step down as the of the revolution as well as revolutionary masses. Persons Chairman of the People’s Republic, though still in positions of power were known as cadres, and in his maintaining the position of Chairman of the CPC. For the Sixteen Points, Mao addressed them vaguely, naming them next half a decade, he would be politically pushed aside by as falling “roughly into the following four categories: good; moderates from his party that disagreed with his policies. comparatively good; those who have made serious mistakes However, throughout this time, Mao was still gradually but have not become anti-Party, anti-socialist rightists; the rebuilding his power and supporters and in 1962 began a small number of anti-Party, anti-socialist rightists.” small campaign to purify his party. In 1966, he officially According to Mao, those that were good or comparatively launched the Cultural Revolution, claiming the bourgeoisie good made up a majority, but “The anti-Party, antitrying to restore capitalism needed to be put down through socialist rightists must be fully exposed, refuted, violent class struggle. The Chairman enlisted the help of overthrown and completely discredited and their influence middle school students, as well as some university and eliminated.” In his wording, many conceivable actions can high school students, and organized them into the be seen. The phrases “good” and “comparatively good” are notorious Red Guard, commanding them to “struggle clearly up for interpretation, and most likely purposefully against and crush those persons in authority” as well as elusive. In accordance to this, the consequences of being “criticize and repudiate the an “anti-Party, anti-socialist objectives and rightist” are equally unclear. It is reactionary bourgeois academic “...their responsibilities rang in their obvious that Mao wanted those authorities” (Mao’s Sixteen thoughts; they were rallied and in opposition to him to be Points). His words regarding the Revolution and its enlisted, their rights assumed…” removed or threatened, and he objectives were incredibly wanted the revolutionaries to act vague, and in part contributed to the confusion and chaos upon this. The lack of clarity in his words could possibly that resulted. The youth of the Red Guard started to wreak be a ploy to assemble the Red Guard, and convince them havoc upon the old social order. Acting in accordance to to take action against their elders, as well as teachers and the words of their leader, they began to rise and attack other respected figures. Power in a society often rests elders, teachers, anyone that could be a possible enemy of within the masses, something Mao Zedong clearly realized. the state. Mao’s words regarding their objectives and The responsibilities he charged the Red Guard with, the responsibilities rang in their thoughts; they were rallied responsibility of creating a revolution and of taking power and enlisted, their rights assumed – but not necessarily for themselves, gave rights to the Red Guard that were dictated – which is a possible explanation for the violence unexpected. In doing so, the Chinese Cultural Revolution that came after. quickly escaped the grasp of Mao, and fell into the hands of the Red Guard. Mao Zedong’s Sixteen Points were adopted by the CPC in 1966 as guidelines for the ideals and courses of “Chance” by Jessie Dibb It’s STRANGE because I never knew That I would get so I used to And SEE you from AFAR WONDER who you really are Your LAUGH, your Your GRIN EYES, your CHIN, And the way you’ll A life of CLOSE to you NEVER cease to be , to me Cherish the Little Things By: Melissa Phillips Goldfish. Apple sauce. Juicy Juice boxes. These were just a few of the many items in my cart as I got in line to checkout at the supermarket. If that didn’t scream Hey! I’m a mother with a small child! I don’t know what would. Placing my items on the conveyer belt at the checkout register, the sound of sirens slowly became louder as a police car flew past the front of the store, followed by a fire truck, then an ambulance. Where on earth would they be headed this early in the morning? I figured I’d find out soon enough. After all, Brookside was a small town and news spread like wildfire around here. Groggy and extremely exhausted, I loaded my bags into the trunk of my sapphire Volkswagen Jetta and yawned as I looked up at the sun was slowly emerging into the sky, as daytime would be approaching soon. I don’t necessarily enjoy grocery shopping at the crack of dawn but it’s the only time I have to shop between my crazy schedule at the hospital. As I climbed into the driver’s seat and started the car, another ambulance raced by the supermarket with its lights and sirens illuminating the darkness. Wow, something pretty severe must’ve happened. I pulled out of the parking lot and headed home where I would soon have to change into my scrubs and be off to the hospital. As I was on my route home I noticed I was following the ambulance’s path. Maybe I’ll get to see what all the fuss was about sooner than I thought. Approaching Chestnut Street, worry lines started to cover my forehead as the ambulance in front of me made a sharp left turn into my neighborhood. Vibrant red and blue lights flashed from the entrance. Butterflies began fluttering in my stomach as I briskly followed the life squad, fearing the worst. Please don’t be my house, please don’t be my house. Increasing pressure on the gas pedal, panic began to boil inside of me. I turned sharply onto my street, only to slam on my brakes as I realized all of the ambulances and police cars were at my house. The only things running through my mind were my husband and my daughter. I jammed on the parking brake and tumbled out of my car leaving it running in the middle of the street. I could feel my face flushing and tears swelling in my eyes. My soul felt separate from my body as a wave of utter terror washed over me. My forehead began to perspire and cool tears began to trickle down my warm, flushed face. “Piper!” I screamed when I saw her standing by the porch with one of the cops. I shoved my way through the numerous fireman, policemen, and EMTs in my yard to get to her. “Ma’am you can’t come through here,” a burly EMT informed me as he grabbed my arm. “You get your hands off of me! This is my house and my husband and daughter are in there,” I dryly scolded as I ripped my arm from his grasp. “Mommy!” cried a terrified Piper as she waddled over to me from the porch. “My soul felt separate from my body as a wave of utter terror washed over me. My forehead began to perspire and cool tears began to trickle down my warm, flushed face.” “Piper! Oh my God I’m so glad you’re safe,” I whispered to her as I bent down and held her tightly. “Excuse me, officer? What’s going on and where is my husband? Was there a fire? A break in? A gas leak?” “No ma’am your house is just fine. Your husband on the other hand…,” he paused. “Well… He’s had a minor heart attack.” “No!” I gasped as tears finally spilled from my eyelids. “Where is he now? Is he going to be okay?” I choked. “The heart attack was minor, so the EMT’s believe he will recover over time, and they’re getting ready to transport him to the hospital. He was unresponsive when we arrived; however, the EMT’s managed to revive him. They believe he’s suffered a minor concussion upon falling from the heart attack, but they won’t know any more until tests are run at the hospital.” “Oh thank God! How did you know to come here? He didn’t call did he?” I pondered. “No, he didn’t call us. It looks like you’ve got yourself a little hero on your hands. Your daughter called 911. She told the dispatcher he fell and hit his head and that he wouldn’t wake up. If she wouldn’t have called when she did there’s a possibility your husband wouldn’t be alive right now,” he told me as he flashed a smile at Piper. The officer leaned down to get right at Piper’s level, looked her in the eyes and said, “Piper, you did a very brave thing today, especially only being four years old. You did the right thing calling 911 when you knew there was something wrong with your dad.” She looked up at him and nodded shyly and the officer gave her an “honorary police badge” to pin on her shirt. A smile crept across her face as well as mine. The police were getting ready to leave when I glanced over and saw the EMTs rolling my husband out on a stretcher. He was stable but still needed medical attention immediately. “Wait!” I yelled to the EMTs. They stopped at the edge of the ambulance. A lump was beginning to form in the back of my throat again just seeing my husband in that condition. “Jason,” I smiled as a salty tear rolled down my face once more and I bent down to wrap my arms around him. “Jenna, don’t cry. Really, I’m fine,” he croaked out with a weak smile. “I know. I just… I can’t believe this happened,” I whispered as he reached up and softly stroked my cheek, wiping away my tears. “How did the police and EMTs get here? I don’t remember calling them. Was it you?” “No. I was at the supermarket.” “What? If it wasn’t you then who was it?” “Piper,” I answered with a smile. Jason turned his head in shock to look at Piper. “Come here Piper,” Jason cooed and I lifted her onto his lap. “Piper I want you to know that you saved my life this morning, and I will forever be grateful for that. I’m so proud of you and that little police badge of yours shows how brave you were.” Jason leaned over and placed a soft, gentle kiss on Piper’s forehead and extended his arm for me, pulling us into a long embrace. I almost lost my husband that day, which made me realize how the people we love can be there one moment and gone the next. How easy it is for them to fall through our fingertips and disappear forever. Sure, they’ll always be in our memories and in our hearts, but not physically with us. After that dreadful morning, I realized how important it is to cherish the little things in life. Piper will always cherish that little police badge of hers, as it reminds her how proud Jason was of her. People cherish little things in their lives, whether it’s a bouquet of flowers from your first date, or a photograph of your deceased grandmother. Every moment we have with our families- even the little things- should be cherished because you never know when it will be the last. Nature by Jessica Wilson Inside Dream by Abigail Walouke Yellow Dreams By Amira Righi Yellow dreams only happen in the summer When the snow is long gone And the lemonade is too sweet Anything can happen And everything is real You slayed the tiger With your bare hands Life and death Dreams and reality Are lost in lucidity You Yet The But are gone ever present world is gone you run yours When the first hint of cold air sweeps you off your feet You get scared You're going to lose your yellow dream Coffee Break You want to stay here forever But the world wakes you up You find yourself lying down in the middle of the road By Tehya Morgan Tears fall, and screams tear your ear drums apart You long for your yellow dream She poured hot coffee down her throat But the tiger you slayed is eating at your As if it would make her forget the pain Lovely Yellow Dream Of heartbreak Her mind was focused on the taste Dark toast, flavored with hazelnut The boy at the train station Sat on the cold bench with a burnt tongue From his first sip of coffee It smelled like hazelnut He thought of the girl with the polka dot rain boots That walked out of his life just last week Broken hearts are like burnt tongues Both take time to heal You may think it’s better But you can’t taste the sweetness of life anymore There’s a rough patch that you remember At 2 in the afternoon Bloom by Amanda Garvin Giraffe by Madison McConkie http://pocketguys.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/11/Pink-Rose-Flowers-HD-Photo-Wallpaper.jpg Watermelons by Annabelle Engle Give it a Chance By: Cami Albers I ran a hand through my hair, ignoring the I walked up, my wobbling legs carrying me thick droplets dripping off my arm. Tugging on my in a baby deer-like fashion. My mask was slipping; shorts, I wished that I had worn longer pants, even the emotions that I had swallowed down bubbling if we were in Costa Rica. Generally, the days were back up to the surface. I wasn’t ready; I wasn’t filled with sticky, stagnant air today the rain was prepared to be hanging several hundred feet off the depleting the humidity and plunging the ground. I reached the attendant, his honey-colored temperature down to the 60s. I sucked in a sharp hand lifting me onto the platform next to the breath as the platform rocked below me, a slight cable. breeze tipping the floor slightly. It was getting My hands shook as I handed over the harder and harder to ignore my situation. I was handle that would connect me to the line. I looked terrified of leaving the ground, of flying past the at my feet as he explained what to do. I needed to trees, only secured by a harness on a handle that put my hands on the silver handle, hold one, and was easily detachable for the employees. tuck my knees to my chest. I nodded as he finished I shuddered, trying to roll the awful possibilities out of my head. The line was inching his mini-tutorial. I placed my hands on the handle, the cool closer and closer to the drop, the cable, and the metal slipping into my palm. I squeezed my fingers nightmares that followed after. I turned back to shut around it, my knuckles turning white from the my huddle of friends we were in a large circle, pressure. The attendant lifted me up, separating clutching each other like penguins to keep warm. I my feet from the ground, a soft chuckle erupting put on a smile, the mask of pure calm slipping onto from his lips. I fought back the panic that was my face once again. steadily creeping up. Squeezing my eyes shut, I took “You guys ready?” I asked, my voice dripping with nonchalance that I didn’t have. “Yeah, it’ll be so much fun, zip lining was a deep breath, trying to relax my tight muscles. Opening them up, I was blinded by the sun peeking out from the clouds, its yellow rays fighting for one of the things on my list,” Faith piped up, her control of the sky. I smiled, my confidence boosted tall stature looming over my petite frame. a bit. If the sun was winning the fight of the sky, I I sighed from the moment I signed up on the trip, this was my only dread. (Unlike Faith, could win my own battle. “Enjoy the ride,” The attendant called. who, as many of my friends had, put this thing on her list: Things to Do before College.) Still, I was willing to give it a chance, at least to see how it went. “Cami, you’re up next. How come you seem so calm?” Karah asked, tugging on my sleeve and pointing to the end of the platform. I shrugged, a little proud that I had managed to cover up my jitters. But Karah’s words sunk in and I fought to hold onto my mask. I was next? When did that happen? “Next!” I slowly turned around, gulping and my heart beat spiking. Peace and Quiet by Kate Mroczka “Lost opportunities cause erosion of confidence and the downward spiral begins.” -Charles Stanley I thought back to a poem my mom could recite from memory: E.E. Cummings’ Let’s Live Suddenly Without Thinking. She used to pull out a thick black book, finger the worn pages and read it out loud; teaching me the magic poetry brought her. A few lines ran through my head, soothing me: let’s live suddenly without thinking under honest trees, a stream does. Yeah right I’ll remember to do that. I sarcastically The brain of cleverly-crinkling thought. Give it a chance! I reminded myself. -water pursues the angry dream I left the ground, the vast wind howling of the shore through my hair, blowing it up, my blonde locks a halo. I gained speed, the grey sky blending into one blurry blob. I smiled, my cheeks widening. It wasn’t horrifying it was actually fun. Flying through the trees, small flashes of color from the flowers growing in the rainforest. Yearning to see more, I angled my head to the side, breathing in the citrus fragrance filtering up from the treetops. Bracing myself, I looked down, expecting to see the tree line, the brightness and fullness of the forest below. Instead, the opaque, white, rain clouds covered my surroundings, a blank sheet of paper waiting for my death the paint the canvas with a story. The sun missing, gloom running the sky. Why did I look down? You’re never supposed to look down! People are taught that in every film or movie that has heights! My green eyes widened, my muscles tensing again. I choked back a scream, the hum of the metal harness scraping against the zip line, pounding into my school, matching my frantic mood. My eyes slipped shut. I held my breath. I kept back shiny tears; they burned my closed eyes, a dam waiting to burst. I felt dizzy a few moments after, the pressure in my lungs increasing. Screaming at me, telling me to take a breath. I pried my eyes open and choked in another gulp of the sweet and moist air. Adrenaline was shooting through my body, my mind racing. I felt exhilarated, my face breaking out into a full-watt smile. “Woooo,” I screamed, my voice echoing through the still air. “Pura Vida,” someone called out. It meant ‘pure life’ in Spanish and the Costa Ricans used it to describe anything wonderful. I laughed, the sound light, sending notes into the air; glad he could pinpoint my exact reaction. My head snapped up, no longer trailing the line of trees below me. I could see the platform, I got ready. Slowing down, the wind was no longer blowing my hair around. The harness collided with the stopping break, a huge clank echoing through the platform, and my feet touched the solid surface. Oscar, our guide, unclipped me and engulfed me in a friendly hug. Throwing my hands up into the air I noted the sun was back, shining its bright and exuberant rays over the forest. “How was it?” he asked, his brown eyes gleaming. He loved seeing us happy; it was his duty, his life. “Amazing I’m ready for the next one,” I answered, actually telling the truth. I wasn’t afraid anymore. I had pushed through it. Let’s Live Suddenly Without Thinking: http://poetryx.com/poetry/poems/10097 Gray and Personal By Dean Ellis Dear Dean Ellis, Greetings, this is gray crayon, your favorite color crayon for some odd reason. I have sent this letter to you because I have finally assessed the reason why you thought so highly of me. All you ever used me for was to draw your dull brainless gray robots. I mean sure you drew the occasional moss colored dinosaur, but I think have more of a right to argue than green does. However I’m getting a head of myself, what I wanted to tell you was that you may have loved drawing all those robots, but I didn’t. They were so squared and cliché I’ve seen more original robots from Isaac Asimov, oh sorry, you wouldn’t know who that is. And don’t even think of using the childish argument of “I used other colors to make my robots.” Please, all you ever used red, yellow, and green for was to add eyes and buttons onto your lifeless automatons. So you may be wondering what I am going to do to you? Well first of, I’m going to institute legal proceedings against you, or in lemans terms, I am going to sue you. On what grounds you may ask? Well besides you using me on a constant basis, you never let me unlock my full potential. I can be used for many fascinating things besides robots, like click-clock-gears, and muskydull-silt. People want to see the bleakness of industry, not the imaginative world of sci-fi. So I will see you in court, you dimwitted simpleton. Sincerely, Gray Crayon+ P.S. Your robots were atrocious! “Without tradition, art is a flock of sheep without a shepherd. Without innovation, it is a corpse.” Dragon’s Cove by Brianna Glassco -Winston Churchill The Path by Abigail Walouke The Light of a Heart by Heidi Cervantes I am fourteen, And my personality is never terminal At times I find crossing the finish line an easy task, And other times I have to drag myself across it. Society still mutters my name, As if I am a dead ghost trying to escape the graveyard Grasping the dirty grass, getting my hands moist with morning mist What if I died tomorrow? Would someone in this lonely world cry for me? Or just move on as if it were just a phase. But at least I know that my soul is lost In a never ending desert, where no one can copy it. I need to be encouraged To run faster, train harder So that fitting in becomes easier Though I’ve learned that life is not that simple. I wonder why at times. But at least I know that my soul is lost In a never ending desert, where no one can copy it. I love the smell of midnight, With its nightly animals, and crawling creatures It is so different from the glowing sun, the devil of the morning But at least I know that my soul is lost In a never ending desert, where no one can copy it. Why don’t I try some more! Think bigger, be smarter That’s what everyone wants from me. Rebellion feels so good, When I’m fighting to be free from treacherous grounds But at least I know that my soul is lost In a never ending desert, where no one can copy it. Weapons of hatred are all too common Sticks and stones will never hurt me, Not as much as the comments I used to get called. But at least I know that my soul is lost In a never ending desert, where no one can copy it. Adam Smith A LOVE UNWANTED BY MADISON MILLER My love, my dear Mia You are the best thing That has ever happened to me I’ve loved you since The day I met you With your wild eyes and messy hair I would talk about you In my father’s garden I could see our life together In this glorious town This house I restored for us Mia Anderson I couldn’t be filled with more regret I should’ve gotten out sooner My whole life was ahead of me But he took it all away How many hours I spent Gazing at the stars Where we could both live Our own happy ever after story But you talked of wanting to leave You wanted to get away From what? I didn’t understand You always used to whisper But I didn’t want you to leave You tried Wondering what they would look like From somewhere else The books I cuddled with Whispered wonders Of unknown places Extraordinary places. I always said Tomorrow, Tomorrow, tomorrow, tomorrow Tomorrow I would leave him Tomorrow I would get out of this horrid town Tomorrow I will awaken somewhere new But little did I know That I would run out of tomorrows Only seventeen My thoughts will fade like the setting sun On my final day I will cease to exist And my soul will ache For the yearn of an infinite tomorrow You told me you were IIcarus by Jessica Wilson leaving I I wasn’t going to let you go c So I slipped it into your drink a It made you sleepy at first r But then you started to cry u The sun started to set s And I realized this wasn’t what I wanted Your breathing started to slow b My heart began to race y Instead of saying you loved me Your final word J Was “tomorrow” e You were never mine s But now you will never leave me s Cause we both died that day i In this horrid town c a W i l s o n Lesson #1: Don’t be narcissistic and lecture others on life lessons Hahahahahahhaha. Hahahahahhaha. That is you right now. You’re currently supposed be dying of uncontrollable fits of laughter caused by my on-point humor. Anyway, I digress. To what I’m actually here for. A modest proposal – which may or may not be in the form of a life lesson – from me to you. Personally, I believe that as a teenager living the first world life in the glorious twenty-first century, I should theoretically have no complaints about my current living conditions. The fact that I drag myself to a place of learning for seven hours a day and five days a week for approximately seventy percent of the year should theoretically be the highlight of my existence. The fact that I have the opportunity to stay awake until two o’clock in the morning every single day completing work that explores some of the most valued studies in the world (which, for the record, range from European history to human anatomy and physiology) should theoretically be an excuse to hold daily jubilant celebration. The fact that the last two years before I officially become an adult are filled with test scores and decisions (made by both myself and others) that may or may not affect me for the rest of my life should theoretically cause fountains of joyous tears to erupt from eyes. Unfortunately, as you may know, this is all indeed theory. As a teenage living the first world life in the glorious twenty-first century, I am actually a horrifying, ungrateful, angry, and depressed creature. I was fully aware of this, but I felt no internal motivation to change this. Until recently. I have noticed that many, if not all, of the individuals of my age group and beyond (myself included) suffer from a basically chronic disorder that influences nearly every part of our lives. This disorder is a plague to our society. Your current willingness to read this great work of art is a strong indication that you are a frequent victim of the horrific pandemic. In fact, I am so sure of my diagnosis that I’m willing to place a hefty bet of three Pilot® G-2TM pens, two Paper Mate Clearpoint Elite® mechanical pencils, and a case of lead. What is this terrible disease that we have all somehow fallen prey to? One word simultaneously summarizes the disorder and strikes fear into our very human hearts. Procrastination. Let’s face it. No one actually stays awake until two o’clock in the morning every single day solely completing work that explores some of the most valued studies in the world. Some days, maybe. Every single day? Definitely not. In fact, I am once again willing to place the same hefty bet as before that your schedule after school is almost exactly this: Time Activity After school activities/sports and extracurriculars (known commonly as productivity) Dinner, catching up with friends or family (also 5:00pm-7:00pm known as productivity) 2:15pm5:00pm 7:00pm-12:00pm 12:00pm2:00am THE INTERNET! ! ! ! ! ! ! And other relatively useless activities (known as procrastination) Trying, and failing, to finish copious amounts of study material (known as the unfortunate result of procrastination) As you can clearly see, the plague of procrastination causes the average individual to lose approximately five hours of sleep a night, which, over an entire school year, totals to about one thousand two hundred sixty hours of sleep lost due to the disability. Basically, while you were fulfilling your goal of watching every sitcom that ever existed on Netflix, you could’ve slept for fifty two and a half days. I am not, of course, trying to be a holy saint sent from above to lecture you on your wrongdoings. I am, very unfortunately, as guilty, if not more so, of the crime of procrastination as the person I am currently sitting next to in the Learning Commons. This beautifully snarky narration? Formulated in study hall two hours before I have to turn it in. That’s right, all about the authenticity. I have, however, realized that my procrastinating mindset may affect more areas of my life than simply my sleep. As my doctor tells me every year I drop by for a visit: “YOU NEED TO SLEEP MORE. MOAAAARRRRRRRRRRRRRR.” I am as tired as the next person is of hearing this statement, but the doctor just might actually be right. Think about it. According to my highly scientific calculations above, teenagers living the first world life potentially lose fifty two and a half days of sleep a school year (note: I am not even acknowledging the summer months…) to procrastination. When we lose sleep, we become tired. When we are tired, we morph into these horrifying, ungrateful, angry, depressed creatures. And what are first world teenagers always accused of? Being horrifying, ungrateful, angry, depressed creatures. What is the solution to this never ending cycle you ask? I have found the answer and it is clear. Conventional physicians have yet to reach this conclusion, but it is quite obvious. Every teenager, from this point forward, should take daily injections of caffeine directly into the bloodstream. One Way Bridge by Abigail Walouke I have discovered that through this method, I can avoid entirely the issue of being tired. Although this remedy comes with unpreventable twitching throughout the entire body, and cases of organ failure leading to death, as a society, we can band together and fight the curse of the ungrateful and temperamental first-world teenager. Thank you for reading “Life Lessons (and a Modest Proposal) with Catherine Gong”, and please consider my modest proposal. Music is by Archana Ravinuthala __________ It is the senior girl screaming the anthem. to a song she doesn’t know. Lights shifting in hues of amber, obsidian and white Roaring, eclipsing around her Isolating her, Yet she feels less alone than she ever has. As she screams, (screeches really), voice growing hoarse, wapping her hands against her dew-wet jeans. taking hostage of her senses Except, for the burning, exhilarating, adrenaline rushing Notes that seem to wrap her in a feeling of unity, A brick in something bigger than herself. It is the beads of sweat that drip down the forehead Of a anxious fourteen year old pianist. The notes slickly slipping out Like oil on a platter Agile fingers Stretching out. Darting. A symphony of subtle and deliberate of vexatious and soothing. Each key, pressed with subtle nervousness and hesitation is a brick in something bigger than himself. It is the rock star Sweat clinging to his fringe. It is the screams of a million fans, and the guitar evaporating into the crowd. His sapphire eyes burn with adrenaline, excitement, pride and It is the soft tinkling of a wordless hymn uncertain-but-bliss. His senses are alight with his own voice and while it may look like this word “Music” may only be about him and his kind. You’d be so wrong. For this show of grandeur and modern superheroes perched on a stage is a brick in something greater. It is the soft tinkling of a wordless hymn that a mother hums To a sleepless infant. A ball of wonder, sucking in knowledge like a sponge She hums it back, tiny fingers grabbing at her mother’s golden locks. It is the garbles the baby tries to speak But she is a tiny tiny tiny brick of something greater than themselves It is the girl in Africa, sneaking away in her bedroom to get a moment of peace, slipping on her head phones. She speaks to the girl at the party. She listens to the boy on stage. She teaches the pianist. She helps raise the baby, her little sister. . This is it. The union of the world Through every corner and every avenue. Possessing the bricks of us all To form a wall of Music. The City by Anna Estes My Name by Mariam Soliman My name means blessed, honorable, or noble. My name can also mean kind, nice or good to everyone. My name is like the light blue color of the sky. It smells like the fresh wind as it brushes through the leaves of a tree on a bright spring morning. Tassneeme. That is the name of a miraculous fountain in paradise. That is also the original name that my parents wanted to give me. Such a pretty name with such a long shorten my name after all. I do not like when people try to shorten my name though, each letter pronounced adds more to its beauty. It feels like smooth silk approaching your skin as you softly pronounce each letter when it comes out of your mouth. Actually, Marmar…, that would probably sound cool too…! Mother by Jessica Wilson In Arabic, my name is the name of one of the most honorable women, in other words it comes from the name Mary. My name has so many meanings, but my favorite is God’s beloved. Mary was a strong, motivated woman who persevered with what she believed was right even though there may have been thorns in her path. This is what made her God’s beloved. I know that people may not accept me because of my appearance, but I know, and can depend on God to always be there because he is the one and only who can see my perseverance and my strength. My strength is the light inside of me that glows brighter and brighter each day because of the experience that I gain from the world around me, as each day passes. stream of letters, thank goodness my parents convinced themselves otherwise. Just like looking at a crossword puzzle; its length would probably give all my teachers a headache form just from glancing at it. Many would have probably given me a nickname anyways instead of trying to glue two parts of the name together to make it sound right. If would have gotten a nickname, I would have appreciated something cool. I would have wanted it to be something like: Taz, the Tasmanian devil from Looney Toons, or a nick name with two syllables that is short and sweet for someone to say like Tas-Tas. Mariam. I know just a couple of girls who have this name. My younger cousin would be one of them. She was named after me, but of course, for our family to differentiate between the two of us, she has a nickname. We call her Me-me for short; maybe there is something to Mariam, this name is unique to me and is what defines me as a person. All of the meanings of my name are characteristics that I try to embody in my everyday life; elements like nobility, kindness, and honorability are characteristics that may not necessarily show in my physical appearance but are hidden deep down inside like an earthworm waiting for some rain to bring it out to the world. If you ask me I can not think of a name that I would rather have more than Mariam. I would never change it, even when I turn eighteen! “Don’t forget to fall in love with yourself first.” -Carrie Bradshaw An Ode to Family By Abigail Werner The smiles, luminescent with jocular joy, Watered down To a diluted, elated beam of pride. Round lenses perched on a childish face gleam brightly as he holds the gentle hand, clothed in silken material of her wedding dress and vibrant flowers. She, with flaxen hair curled in elegant ringlets and Tucked back by an opaque veil glistens with love for him, who crossed the track of her turbulent family for her, of fatherly gambles, and her parents’ marriage going into shambles. For him, paternal misdemeanors and wicked tales of student loans whilst his sister becomes a pianist and a dancer. Both have met unfair fates that have today twisted through brambles to blossom as roses. After years of singular euphoria of just each other, the life of their very first child a loud set of boisterous lungs and a buck-toothed grin, a choppy golden rats nest of hair perched atop a head too big for an underweight body Then after three and a half blissful years of the first child on both maternal and paternal sides, dark purple moons gracing the proud mama and papa’s eyes as having one child becomes two children and the raggedy little girl grows in status from an only child to the elder sister yet her fame quickly withers at the arrival of a red-faced, wailing buffoon of a baby. She loathes the creature of Mommy’s attention and Daddy’s cuddles all because the poor thing spit up on her on the day of her delivery But in the twenty-year- old photo, The man and the woman know not of their soon- to be fate of a family, only of the happiness that they bring to one another. Oliver McKenzie By Jackie Osborne Mommy used to say that I looked just like Daddy, And I never understood why she looked so sad; Her tears crying as hard as she was, and her eyelids As puffy as a cotton ball. “I knew he never loved me.” She would mutter to herself, she would believe her lies, She would try to move on. Why she didn’t want to know, what she didn’t want to believe, Was that Daddy drank, he drank a lot. And when he did come home, stumbling around the room, She begged him to stop, for my sake. Then one day he came, drunk as ever, to claim me, his son. “No.” She demanded. “You had your chance.” And closed the door. From that day on Mommy changed, she stopped crying She pulled herself off the ground and stood strong, Much like that First Lady I had seen on TV. Until when he came back, smelling of alcohol, demanding That which was rightfully his. They fought and he left. But I didn’t get to say goodbye. So I followed him, running into the street, Into the path of his drunken rage, and his ’63 thunderbird. Pensive By Kate Mroczka Now Mommy cries every night. Because no one comes home. Not even me. My father was a drinker. And his father before him. I promised myself I would never be like them, like the two monsters I grew up with. Like two overgrown ogres in charge of my life. I would be the father I had always wanted, the one I would give to the only boy I had, the one my son wanted so many times Reflection of Me By Nadia C. Myrie before I crushed him with a bottle of whiskey and a push of the pedal. My tires screamed as my whole world fell dead before me. The look from his mother terrifying my very soul. I had failed. I would never be that father. It wasn’t all my fault, you know. That stupid, superficial car salesman should have stopped me from buying a car. Me, a man who only smelled like the bitter taste of cheap alcohol, like the staleness of a three days old suit, like the tar of a pack of menthols. Had I known Clifford my entire life, he still would have known better. So I kept going, kept driving, until the police found me “Joseph McKenzie?” I didn’t answer. “Father of Oliver McKenzie?” Not anymore. Joseph McKenzie By Jackie Osborne down into the muck beneath as the last of us charged across no man’s land. We all knew we were going to die, including our Commanding Officer who briefly after giving the order to charge turned his gun upon himself. A round struck the visor on my helmet, shattering the composite The Omega Initiative By: Blake Nissen War buzzed all material and the heads up display dancing across it. My fingers fumbled across the rim of my helmet to find the release latch. After a sharp tug on the wire, the whole system split into two pieces and fell from my suit. In one around me. Muzzle motion I drew the knife from its sheath on my leg and my flashes and the cracks of side arm from the holster on my other, and along with the rifles produced shell few remaining men, jumped into enemy occupied trenches. casings that land with a I feel a hand grasp my shoulder and spin around, pressing thud in the oozing mud. the folded steel of the knife into her neck. Sarah. The whole world was Sarah dropped the coffee onto the cemen t floor. The death. And the whole glass shattered as the hot liquid webbed its way into the world was lit with white cracks of the floor. “Dad!” she screams as she pushes back flares, explosions and into my hand which is holding the blade against her neck. rocket trails. Shrapnel The war torn valley melts around me into the features of tore bodies apart, the my home. I recoil, slamming my back into the window and same bodies that slowly letting the knife clang against the hard ground. My lungs sink into the greedy grip gasping for air as my eyes dart around the apartment, its of torn up ground. The cold steel and cement features glare back at me. My eyes brown murky water dance across her face, still petrified standing in place with turned red, the ground her hand holding her neck. now a layer of brass and corpses. My heavy black suit of armor pulled me “Oh my God Sarah, I’m…. I’m…” I stuttered my thoughts still clouded from being ripped from my false reality. “Same battle as always.” My senses started to adjust, no longer smelling the death and coarse gun powder but the stinging metallic air of the three room apartment; one bedroom, one bathroom and a room for everything else. Sarah occupied the “It’s… fine,” Sarah stammered as she walked over to the small tarnished mirror in the corner. Her neck was bruised from my fingers, dark purple streaks that encompassed the entire left side of her neck. She sighed, pulled her dark brown hair, which held stark contrast to her bluegreen eyes, over her right ear and asked, “Another war?” Icarus By Anna Hayes bedroom; lately I have preferred the cou ch anyway. The floors were all concrete and the walls were just the floor with occasional steel beams for support. The apartment “Same war as was a common space for the lower middle class in what always,” I climbed to my was left standing on the semi barren wasteland of Earth. feet, grabbing the knife as Sarah walked over to me, glass of water in hand. As I I stood. reached for the glass she wrapped her arms around me. She “What battle?” set her ear right over my heart and just held me. Without a word she let go, handing me the glass and walked over to the wall to grab a towel to “Greetings Citizen 5594, Walker, Sarah. We heard a wipe up the coffee I made disturbance, is there a problem?” The Drone stood at about her spill. “Sarah I’m-,” 6 feet tall, the police model has only light armor, the arms “Shhhh, its ok Dad. It’s not the first time this has happened. I know you aren’t going to hurt me.” “But what if I do? What if I don’t snap out of and legs still mostly open, showing the hydraulics and the circuits that made this things skeleton and circulatory system. Painted blue, black and white with a large screen displaying “POLICE” in large font, Sarah knew it had the ability to change depending on the language spoken. I t had black slits where the eyes would be, but Sarah could still feel its piercing gaze. it? What if I don’t let go? What if-” “Dad! Stop,” Sarah “No there is no problem, just spilled my coffee that’s yelled. “I’m fine.” A knock pounded through the all.” house, the sound of metal “May we search the premises?” on metal. “I’ll get it.” Sarah laid down the towel as I finished what she started, sweeping up the jagged edges of the cup into the center of the towel. Sarah waved her hand across the censor on the right of the door, opening it. “Hello, can I help you?” “It’s really not necessary just some spilled coffee. Thank you for your concern.” Sarah began to close the door as the drones hand wrapped itself around the door, preventing her from doing so. The bot forced the door open. “Co-operation is appreciated,” the drone said with cruel tone. I’m not going to fight again I told myself again and again, never that savage. Never again. I looked up when I hear the door fly open and see Sarah tumbling back into the wall. An older model and slammed me against the window. A crack spider police bot standing over webbed across the screen where my shoulder had muttering something as it impacted. looked away and continued its path towards me. “Greetings Citizen 5462, Walker, Gabriel. We heard a disturbance, is there a problem?” “No problem here, just some spilled coffee,” I said flatly. I turned to set the towel on the counter right next to the knife. “Weapon spotted,” “Dad!” Sarah screamed from across the room. As she ran towards me the drone collapsed the baton and drew another object from its side. The small silver object unfolded itself into a pistol. A red laser protruded from just under the barrel, sitting deathly still on Sarah’s forehead. “Halt citizen 5594,” the drone demanded. Sarah stopped on a dime standing on what remained of the light brown coffee that sprawled across the floor. “Don’t point that at my Daughter!” I barked at the drone. The order was ignored. “Kneel down, hands behind your head.” Sarah complied. The drone satisfied grabbed the knife from the the drone said as it table and dropped it into slot that just opened up on his grabbed a short black chest. “Weapon confiscated, have a good day.” The drone piece of plastic from its released my arm, stepped past Sarah and exited through side, which quickly the same door it forced open. extended into a baton. The drone started towards me, and I backed away from the counter. This action didn’t matter; the drone grabbed my arm, forced it behind my back “Please Leave a Message after the Beep” by Ally Knestrict He’s ignoring my call, she thought. She’s ignoring my call, he thought, as they both opted out of leaving a message. Stake Out By: Sneha Ameya Well this is not going to end well The girl, had short curly hair that Marion thought as she watched the couple stuck out in different places on her small from across the street. Actually, the term head. Her lips were pursed and her eyes had "couple" was probably not entirely accurate fire in them. She was small for her age-in describing the boy and girl now walking probably 5’ 1” at the most. But, even into a crowded Italian restaurant. Michael (who always paraded himself for "Acquaintances" perhaps. But certainly not a going from fat to buff within a year) couple. And Marion could vouch for that. admitted that she was intimidating to say She'd known Sarah and Brandon since they the slightest. Nevertheless, she wore a were young, and if they hadn't made it clear simple teal dress that came up to her knees that they hated each other since then, they and flared out, like one of those vintage certainly were now. Marion bit her lip as designs that the city tourists always wore. her two friends awkwardly made their way to The boy, who looked slightly less their table, their hands stiffly constricted intimidating than the girl sat facing away at their sides and their eyes from him. Though Michael could avoiding each other. A buzz only see the back of the boys came from Marion's pocket. head from the position he was She whipped out the small in, he could imagine the scowl black transmitter and pressed that would’ve matched his the button on the side. girlfriend’s. "They're going to get Suddenly an icy voice noticed if they keep doing snapped him from his that!" Noah urgently observations, “Are you whispered from the other end. listening to me, young man?” Noah, having posed as a His mother repeated glaring at bartender inside the him from under her spectacles. restaurant in question, Michael cringed under his rolled his eyes as he said mother’s stern look. One very it. They only had one shot at important thing he had learned getting this right. as a child, was to never make On the other end, Mother cross. Marion replied, "Well I did “Yes, of course Mummy. warn the commander about Why wouldn’t I?” Michael this. But you know him. The throatily whispered, mentally man's as thick-headed as my slapping himself for getting Through My Eyes great gran. Steamrolled, right over distracted. By: Nadia Myrie my qualms." Across the street, Marion Noah smirked, "So like usual then?" watched the scene playing out inside the "Of course." Marion sighed, as she little cafe. The transmitter in her pocket picked up her binoculars and peered through buzzed again. it again to get a better view of her “What now?” She whispered into the friends. They were sitting across from each mic. other now, still looking at anything but the “Should we be worried about that man person in front of them. Both of their feet sitting two tables behind Brandon and Sarah? ominously shook under the table, as if they I swear he looked at them for a good 10 urgently needed to use the bathroom. Marion seconds longer than what public decency could almost feel the awkwardness of the calls for. He could be gathering intel, situation wafting towards her from under the planning his next move of attack.” front door. It made her nauseous. Marion, zoomed in on the man. Then She and Noah were not the only ones letting out an exasperated sigh she turned who felt it either. In fact, that pungent on the transmitter again. ”I never thought smell of ‘awkward’ had not gone unnoticed by I’d say this to you, Noah,” she whispered, the man sitting two tables behind them. The “but I think you’ve just found a whole new man, having been bribed by his older brother level of idiotic.” to treat their rambunctious mother to “Wh--idiotic?” dinner, curiously watched the couple that “The man’s middle-aged, has more had just sat down. His mother, who had stains on that T-shirt than my Great Uncle conveniently chosen to sit facing the wall Bernie, and is on a date with his mother. was on one of her rants again so hadn’t And you think he has a capability to ‘plan noticed the tense silence that had arrived his next move’? Please...you’re more likely along with the pair. to kill Brandon or Sarah than him.” “I’m telling you, that cow of a “Well I might, if they don’t stop father of yours will be the death of me!” fidgeting like that. Can’t you do something The elderly women fumed to her son, “He’s to make them act--i don’t know-- more the most arrogant sod I ever had the normal?” distaste of mothering a child with! I don’t Marion sighed. “I could try texting know how you stand him on a daily basis…” Sarah. But the commander won’t be happy.” The man grunted a response, still “Oh trust me, he’ll be a lot less intently watching the couple in front of happy if this whole thing gets screwed up him. Michael figured they couldn’t have been because the pair of them can’t let go of more than eighteen. But something about the their ego for more than five minutes.” way they carried themselves made them look “Fine. But if I go down for this, middle-aged. He thought it might have you’re going down with me.” Marion something to do with their rim-rod posture threatened as she reached for her phone and silent energy that seem to pulse from them. They were the kind of people who could whisper and hush a crowd. | Ripple by Nina Bredemeier It is calm, each steady beating of the drum like a pebble dropped into still waters. Subtle ripples of chords moving and spreading and growing, entrancing and mesmerizing as they lap onto the muddy shores. Her voice perfection within its imperfection, each rasp a display of celebration of humanity. Unadulterated. Empowering. For what does perfection show of wisdom? No room to grow, no reason, no life- the stagnation of any pond is just death waiting. Are we not wise enough? She asks in a soulful voice of no flourishes, as if too heavy with knowledge hard learned through experiences hard won and lost. There’s no time to waste on such frills to smother her words so urgent. An ageless voice to aged words. Pebbles graduate to weathered stones, increasingly hurled in a crescendo of tides, almost pleading in desperation to be understood, only to be held back by words, or lack of. Franticness like a guardian wanting to save others from their own mistakes learned the hard way in the big world. A timeless cycle with infinite revolutions, having to be infinitely learned and relearned, comprehended for each generation. Time is long, but our share is short. Her song draws out, but her plea is clear. Be the one to break that silent pond. Let the loam soak between your toes, the weeds weave and twine through your walking legs, the waves ripple out. Let the musty water stain your jeans, and let the twigs snap beneath your weight. Let the fish know that you’re joining them Run, Run, Run By Mallory Elder You were only fifteen when you fell in love. Too young to know any better. Time flew by as days ticked along slowly. Hands tangled in hair, lips collided and suddenly you were a different person. Life was like a vivid dream- hazy but so magnificently real. You were sixteen when you lay in the bed of his trunk, counting stars like a movie. His hands intertwined with yours, soft and warm like the feeling in your stomach. He whispered silent I love yous against your ears and for the first time, you believe them. It's too dark to see his face but you know he's smiling. You can feel it. You watch red cars whip by like the trees. You know it's not the same this time because they're the ones moving and you're standing still. Behind the iron gate you used to climb over at night to meet him. It looks so much taller today. You can hear the faded music from your mother's open window- a love song. The words slip past you. There's no way to catch them. He drives you out of the town and into the woods, where you can be alone. The trees whip by and disappear one by one. He kisses your hand without taking his eyes off the ride. If you died then, you wouldn't care; you'd have died happy. You were so pretty then, so young. Red hair and redder lips. Pink dresses and high heels. You were beautiful when you were with him. He made you beautiful and you did the same. Young love didn't feel so young. It felt a thousand years old. You're seventeen when he leaves. Going on eighteen and so close to following him. Sneaking away and starting a life like he always said you would. You don't. Dream in the Dark by Abigail Walouke Blue hydrangeas line the porch to his house. Empty now, but still beautiful. You used to take pictures of it. It was so beautiful; the perfect home. No mail comes there anymore but you check every day. The doors are locked but you try to get in every day. You can see his bedroom from the lawn. Can still smell the cashmere cologne he wore. Memories of late nights and soft kisses flood through your mind and you're sure that's why you keep coming back. It isn't. He doesn't write. You know he won't. Deep in your heart, you know you'd go to him if he did. No second thought, your bags are already packed. If he calls you're never around answer. But he doesn't. He thinks about you, you know it, but he doesn't call. Can't. And if he were to call, you would go to him. Be with him. That's the saddest part. You have to wait for him to change his mind. He may never yet you keep waiting because the chance is enough. Boys flick by and you love them but they aren’t him. You watch yourself break hearts and can't stand the guilt of it. So you stop. You know you'll fall in love again one day- or at least you should. You know it will beautiful as the first time. But you don't. You're finally eighteen when you realize you were always alone before him. Your mother is glamorous. Gorgeous and kind. Your father loves you more than anyone. But you still feel lonely and you aren't sure why. It doesn't matter anyway because you'll leave home soon. You'll leave and you'll start a life of your own. Not the one you planned, not the one you wanted, but it will be yours. One day you will see him again, you think. Maybe he'll be married with kids. Maybe he'll break down and confess he's always loved you. It's always been you. You don't care which it is because you love him and you want him to be happy, even if it isn't with you. A small part of you wonders if he'll ever be happy with someone else. You won't. It doesn't matter though, because you fell in love once and it was perfect. The kisses, the late conversations, the fights, the crying. It was all perfect because it was real. You want that again but not with anyone else. It's been too long to still love him but you do. You always will. The thing is you don't know anything. You were only fifteen when you fell in love. You don't know that you won't see him again. That you won't love him forever. That there is someone else out there, many someone else's and you'll love them as much as you loved him. He was the past and he is your present but he will not be your future. You just don't know it yet. Snow By Alyssa Manguiat Falling, Drifting in no specific way and none of them are the same as if each but it’s was delicately crafted by a set of small and gentle hands. And they look as if they are a work of art, only to settle ground in overflowing piles to the and to be smashed under the boots of eager children. Or maybe to be formed into a ball and tossed through the air and fall to the ground with crash. And squeals of joy and endless laughter are spreading the happiness through the cold and crisp winter air. Starlight By: Alex Testerman “Letting your mind ease. And falling into sleep” The Sea of Sky holds mystery Endless stretches of stars, Holding everything in place, But slowly gliding along. Stretching too far for us But still has us wanting more. Staring up to the void Unable to know What is staring back. Forever Unknown. Losing yourself in the beauty. Allowing your body to relax To drift…To float. Into the soundless sea, Engulfed by emptiness. Letting your mind ease. And falling into sleep. Disturbed by none Until the sea Is woke by sun. Galaxies in Her Hand by Kate Mroczka Synesthesia By Lauren Zell I remember when the world was blue. Blue was my brother, Luke, playing piano in the front room, with my mother singing along. The smell of breakfast would waft from the kitchen: bacon and the World’s Best Blueberry Pancakes, courtesy of my dad. He would pop his head into the room and gave me a smile. “Look who decided to wake up this morning!” His hearty chuckles danced through my mind- purple, like the crocuses in our window. I ignored his teasing and began to sing a long, a soprano harmony above my mother’s alto. Luke looked up in slight surprise, but didn’t stop playing. In fact, he didn’t miss a beat. This was the norm, here- a blue morning song followed by a breakfast conversation (mostly lilac and periwinkle) and the radio playing music from decades passed, blues and greens in the side of my vision. But those blue days were fading in my mind. That was the last time I heard blue, bright and clear as a summer sky. I’d been avoiding the sound since it happened, even though it wouldn’t have been the same without her anyway. I began to prefer a dull grey that came from going to my room and sitting Funny how the sound I’d been running away from was the color that might free me. in silence, with my comforter pulled up over my head; I’m not sure whether the grey came from the silence, or from the feeling, the total emptiness and frigid cold, even though my blanket was warm. “Clara.” Luke’s voice managed to wriggle itself into my ears, a lively lilac, now dull and dingy with his murmur. I slowly pulled the blanket away, wiping the tears from my cheeks. Funny, I hadn’t even realized I was crying. “Everyone’s waiting for you downstairs,” he told me, though I already knew. “They want to pay their respects, whatever that means.” Oh yeah, the memorial. I was trying to forget- forget the people downstairs, the whole world if I could manage it- but mostly, forget the green in her singing voice, and in her laugh. Altogether, to forget blue. I forced myself off of the mattress, and followed him out, staring at the carpet. My fingernails dug into the palm of my hand at the thought of the crowd, as my vision began to fill with murmurs of maroon. All I heard was “You poor dear,” and “I’m so sorry.” Navy. Emerald. Enough to fill a crayon box. I just nodded and tried to fade away, leaving behind a thoughtless statue that people were welcome to pity. That’s when I saw- I mean heard- it again: the piano, playing from the other corner of the room. The tune was too familiar to keep from stabbing me with the pain I’d been avoiding. I knew exactly who was playing, just like I knew every single word begging to be sung. But not by me. My voice wasn’t the right shade. The words came out anyway. I ignored the bittersweet smiles and focused on Luke’s fingers gracefully dancing around the keys. At first, each note felt choked back, but it slowly became easier, as the weight in my chest slowly lifted away. Funny how the sound I’d been running away from was the color Serenity that might free me. Not too dark, or to light. Not too lively, but By Maeve Morris definitely not safe. There was only one way to describe it. Blue. The Technician, by Tanvi Jagtap Arthur gently shook his leg as he stood in the lowest tech room of the Pentagon. It had fallen asleep as he guarded the malfunctioning computer systems and the computer scientist sent to fix them. Wincing as his leg prickled with pins and needles, he mulled over a possible shift in career path from government security to something in sunny Florida. “Almost finished,” Dr. Jillian Miller-Lee, the computer scientist, said as she ran one last diagnostic. “Looks like the satellite crash won’t affect the US Government computer systems after all.” Arthur grunted, shaken out of his reverie. “Good.” Jillian grinned. “Aw come on, big guy! SpaceEx Tech formally apologized for screwing with your computers, okay? And we’re fixing our mistake!” She gestured to the computer screens that flickered in the dim basement tech room of the Pentagon. Arthur allowed himself a small smile. It had been stressful when the satellite crashed in Virginia, the normally stoic government technicians sprinting through the halls, drowning themselves in coffee and attempting to fix the staticky computer screens and frozen data files. At first, the higher-ups had thought it was a foreign plot to steal information. That was when SpaceEx Tech had claimed the satellite and sent a computer scientist of their own to untangle the computers. A very pretty computer scientist, who was currently fiddling with her flash drive in one of the USB ports of the computer. Soul Colors by Samantha Jo Giesel Arthur shifted his position to glance at the diagnostic window. “How’s it going?” he asked. Jillian moved in front of the screen. “It’s fine,” she said shortly. Arthur raised an eyebrow. “Programmer babble, you wouldn’t understand a word of it,” she added hastily. The stress of these last few hours must be getting to her, Arthur thought. Jillian looked away from him. “What’s on these data files anyway?” Arthur shrugged. “The usual government stuff no one should know about, I suppose.” Jillian sidled up to Arthur, her body still blocking the computer screen. “What kind of secret government stuff?” she asked, nudging his shoulder playfully. “If I had to guess, and I do mean guess,” he winked. “I’d say the locations of government warehouses. Places where confiscated contraband is stored.” “That it?” Jillian almost sounded disappointed. Arthur shot her a sidelong glance. “That stuff’s worth a lot on the black market.” He remembered the first time he had walked into one, the walls lined with illegal weapons, and cabinets full of heroin, cocaine and meth. If any criminals got a hold of their locations, they’d be rich. “Oh.” Jillian’s eyes gleamed. Arthur frowned. She must really be tired, he thought. The dark circles under her eyes and the frizzy, unkempt hair did nothing to make her look less manic. “They’d be rich.” Behind Jillian, the diagnostic announced its completion with a couple of short beeps. Jillian spun around and glanced at the computer screen, muttering something under her breath. “Is everything alright?” Arthur didn’t need any more stress. The computer technicians under his care spooked easily. Jillian blew her hair out of her face. “Everything is perfect.” she straightened, her hand sliding her flash drive quickly into her pocket. “I should get going,” she said. “SpaceEx needs their top technician!” She smiled brightly and breezed out of the room. Arthur shook his head and smiled. Twenty minutes later he entered the room again, distractedly shuffling the paper stacks searching for something one of the techs needed. The mainframe beeped loudly, starting him from his thoughts. He glanced at the diagnostic on the computer screen, the one that Jillian had forgotten to close before her hasty departure. Something itched in the back of his mind. Download 100% complete, it declared in large block letters. Arthur’s mind was numb and his fingers trembled as he opened the data section of the computer and navigated to the file that held the addresses of the contraband warehouses. File Empty, it read. Tested by Akane Ohara Elisa perched on the buttery leather seats of the dark bullet train and opened up her history textbook. Kat sat next to her scrolling through her social media feeds on her gold phone. King William’s War, Constitutional Convention, Civil War, Cold War, Watergate Scandal, Election of Barack Obama, Amendments 40 through 43... Elisa skimmed through her entire history book in order to freshen up her memory as the train zipped towards the city. “Elisa, you’ll be fine. We studied so much this year and when I quizzed you, you were fine. Besides, we just have to pick the right answer,” Kat tried to reassure. She put her phone away then stood up as the train came to a halt at the hub. Elisa tottered after her, shoving her textbook in between her math notebook and chemistry binder. “Wait up,” she called at Kat’s back, weaving through parents and other students as they all made their way to the school building. “Hurry, we’re going to be late, and we can’t be late or else we’re going to find ourselves thrown into The Village,” Kat shouted over her back and The Village students and parents looked at her, spears of hatred shooting from their eyes. “Sorry!” Elisa grinned at one of The Village students that she had seen at school before. “You know how it is.” The girl nodded, shifting her eyes towards the checkerboard tiles of the train station. With that, Elisa sprinted down the sharp hill and finally caught up with Kat at the steel elevator that led up to the school. A colossal audience gathered at the top, parents and teachers gleaming, as the students found their classes and made their way towards the gates. Kat skipped over to the girls’ class and joined in on a conversation that her friends were having. Elisa walked over to Bryn, her best friend. “Welcome students, you may now enter in order of your classes,” the government official monitoring the Enquiry spoke over the interphone. One by one, The Village students headed in, followed by the Norms. Then, the final class of Manor, which was unusually walking in a straight line, entered the school and marched up the main staircase. Cheers and applause could be heard as the heavy, iron gates closed with a thud. The Manor classrooms were on the third floor, with the best view of the rolling, green vineyards and the city, with its slim, sleek skyscrapers. They reached Room 310 at the end of the glass-enclosed hallway. The sliding door whirled open and the line entered the classroom. The students walked towards the silver port and systematically grabbed their tablets. Elisa sat down on a metal chair at a chrome desk, set the tablet down, and it hummed to life. The bright screen was speckled with official looking letters that read: “This test will decide the rest of your life.” Welcome to the Final Enquiry Her fingers drummed the smooth desk and her feet danced around. She took a deep breath, imagining her parents’ faces when they were informed of her results. They were both beaming widely as they welcomed their party guests into their home to celebrate their daughters’ performance. “Elisa, don’t be so nervous, there’s no thinking involved. You just have to go with your gut,” Bryn said as she leaned over Elisa’s desk. “I know, I know, aren’t you nervous at all?” “No, we’ve taken this test so many times!” Elisa caught Kat’s eye, amidst all their classmates surrounding her, when Ms. Albert walked in her metallic stilettos clicking like the second hand on the clock. Kat’s eyes crinkled and she mouthed “Good luck” as Ms. Albert removed her neon blue shawl to reveal her government issued uniform. “It’s Enquiry Day!” she trilled. Then, her coral grin disappeared and her voice lowered. “This test will decide the rest of your life. I would like you all to do your best and represent Manor well. You have two minutes until the Enquiry begins. Please take your seats and we’ll begin shortly.” The talking dwindled and the rest of the students slowly took their seats. Elisa looked back at Kat and whispered “Thank you” as the national anthem began playing and a mechanized, monotone voice stated, “You have three hours to complete the Enquiry. Begin.” “We only get three hours? I don’t think I’ll finish!” shouted Luke, the class clown, sarcastically at the intercom. The students snickered, knowing they would finish in less than an hour. Elisa saw The Village students flinch and Norms roll their eyes. Bring Back What Once Was Mine “You will not need to start,” the by Madison Krell intercom stated. “You may leave now, Luke. There will be no Enquiry for you. We will use your previous scores in order to place you. Have a good day.” With a blank expression, Ms. Albert walked over, took Luke’s tablet and pointed to the door with a fuchsia nail. Luke rose; his bold grin wiped off of his face, and exited the classroom. Everyone watched as he beat the glass walls then sprinted down the staircase that he had just come up, ten minutes ago. The students faced their tablets and their giddy expressions were replaced with solemnity. Ms. Albert sat down quietly at her desk, her heels not making a single snap. The Real World (excerpt: pages 1-4) By: Sarah Senne The apartment feels much too empty for a night this cold. I know you’re in the bedroom but it’s no comfort, not really; the hardwood floors don’t have a scratch and the marble counter’s just been cleaned and the rooms are too hollow for even an echo tonight. You like it this way, I know. This is The Way Adults Live and we are almost out into The Real World and there’s no time for things like picture frames or creamer here. Here’s a secret: I only pretended to like the coffee black to impress you. Here’s another one: It’s been so long I’ve got no idea which way I really prefer it now. I can’t fall asleep tonight. Again. I can’t tell whether it’s work or life or both that’s got me up this late, wandering the apartment almost every night now. I almost liked the dorms better, the scratches and the snoring and the imperfections were there, but they were communal. There’s a garden here, in the back of the building, but no one ever goes there and the playground’s of no use to this collection of Young Urban Professionals with Bright Futures ahead of them. Sometimes at night, when I can’t bring myself to cross the perfectly polished floor back into our bedroom, I go out there and sit and wonder. But tonight it’s four in the morning and outside the moonlight is still tangled with the trees so I just sneak around the apartment, cold coffee in my hand as I roam these halls that feel like little more than reflections. Careful not to make a sound, I find your shoes by the door and your toothbrush by my sink and it all feels like I’m witnessing something I’m not supposed to. A confession: Sometimes at night I lurk around the hallways, playing at not being the prey for once. I smirk at nothing as I try to somehow dominate the darkness the way you can, so sure in your steps you make no effort to muffle into the shadows. But it’s always broken somehow, a window will have been left unlocked or I’ll hear a squeak from somewhere and I’ll realize my fingers are bony and my legs are bare and the night is not meant to be played with by girls like me. Tonight it’s the floor that breaks it. As I try to slip into the living room it creaks slowly, slashing into the silence. Head down, feet careful, I make my way back into the bedroom and only stop in the doorway to make sure you’re still asleep. You are. The walls seem to rise and fall with your chest as you breathe, in and out and quiet. I sit down on the side of the bed slowly, wincing as you roll over and mumble foggy words that never seem to leave your lips. As I’m lying down, back facing you, you stumble out of sleep. “I only pretended to like the coffee black to impress you” “Bella?” Your voice is barely a whisper, “You awake?” I hesitate for a second, wondering if you’ll notice if I just close my eyes slowly and pretend. But there’s something magnetic in the way you say my name and so I roll over to face you. “Yeah.” There’s a silence and my heart seems to shift into my lungs as I can feel you deciding whether or not ask me why I’m up. “So,” you ask, “Ready for today?” “What’s today?” “We’re meeting my parents? For church?” I raise my eyebrows. “Nick…I thought we agreed-” Today is not a day I’d like to be reminded of my morality. Today there are more important things. “Don’t be mad, come on, it’s just for a few hours. It’s The Adult Thing To Do, they’re really looking forward to seeing you” If by seeing he means judging whether I’m good enough for their trust fund baby, then yes, I’m sure they’re really looking forward to it. Perfect. “Here, I got you something.” You pull out a little red box from the bedside table and hand it to me with a smile. Nestled inside is a necklace, a little silver key on a long chain. “It’s beautiful Nick, thank you!” “If my parents ask, it’s real silver,” you say, breaking the spell as you roll out of bed. I just nod and go out into the kitchen again, the sun hasn’t even begun to rise but I take out two cups for coffee and get the grounds out from the near empty pantry I’m paying too much to rent. I know why he’s doing it, in a way. Guilt and pride and the fact that there’s nothing that slows your twenty one year old heartbeat more than seeing your parents eyes get lighter and lighter. One more day. One more day and this whole meeting will be over with and Nick will be flying out to Santa Monica and I’ll have the place to myself. By the time I’ve showered, found a dress his parents will approve of, and put on makeup it’s time to go. “ Ready?” “Ready” As we get in the car I “You haven’t told your father yet but you’ve started spelling god with a lowercase ‘g’” rehearse the future in my head. Back straight, legs crossed, glossed lips permanently turned upwards into a smile. You’re lost in your own thoughts as well, you keep looking out the windshield but not really seeing anything at all. The entire way there you’re grasping your hands around the wheel so tight they turn red and white around the sides. Around your neck is a small cross necklace your parents must have gotten you, you keep pulling on the chain like it’s choking you. You haven’t told your father yet but you’ve started spelling god with a lowercase ‘g’, and I know you too well to believe you when you keep telling me you’re great, just excited to see them. We both know you’re lying but there’s no time for comfort and soon we’re in the parking lot saying everything’s just fine, doing great, thanks how are you? As we pull into the parking lot I glance at the glowing green car clock. There’s just enough time before the service for your dad to show you him new car and for your mother to interrogate me. “Bella, I’ve got to ask- where did you get that beautiful necklace?”, your mother says as we walk into the chapel. “Nick got it for me” “Is it real?” I smile, “Of course” It’s not a lie, not really. It’s only a fake if your definition of ‘real’ is the most expensive thing in the store. The service seems to last a lifetime. I sit in the chair softly, cross my ankles and fold my hands, punishment and God feel awfully close in this room. There are hymns, choruses with no real unison. There are sermons with words as pale as the man who repeats the verses out towards us. There are little clear cups of what they call Jesus’ blood laid out on the table. I catch your eye as you drink yours; you’re the kind of atheist still scared of going to hell and it shows when you swallow. Iron Angel By: Sarah Senne The Silent Killer Sneha Rajan Imagine being diagnosed with a brain tumor so deadly, there is no chance of longterm survival. Every day could be the last one. Each year, about 23,000 adults in the United States are diagnosed with a primary brain tumor. Approximately 60 percent of primary brain tumors are classified as glioblastoma multiforme. Glioblastoma multiforme is a highly malignant brain tumor that is the most common and most aggressive primary brain tumor in humans. Complete recovery is impossible, and long-term survival is rare. It’s like a ticking time bomb—you never know when everything is going to go black. Glioblastomas are the most common primary brain tumor found in humans. Primary brain tumors arise from cells of the brain itself rather than traveling, or metastasizing, to another location in the body. Typically, glioblastomas can either develop directly or evolve from a lower grade astrocytoma. Astrocytomas are brain tumors that arise from brain cells called astrocytes, star shaped glial cells that support nerve cells . Brain tumors are typically given a grade from I to IV; Grade I is benign while Grade IV is the most malignant. Glioblastoma multiforme is a grade IV astrocytoma. The higher the grade, the faster the tumor grows. They are typically found in the cerebral hemispheres of the brain, but can be found anywhere in the brain or spinal cord. Brain tumors form from abnormal, unregulated growth of cells. Abnormal brain cells re-enter the “cell cycle” because of alteration in any of a large number of genes that control cell division and growth. Research is pointing to genetic mutations as a primary cause of these tumors. Various deletions, amplifications, and point mutations enable the irregular and uncontrolled growth of cells. Treatment for glioblastoma multiforme is like that of any other brain tumor. Standard treatment is surgery (if possible) followed by radiation therapy, chemotherapy, or a combination of the two. Because of glioblastoma multiforme’s ability to invade and infiltrate normal brain tissue, complete resection of the tumor is impossible. Attempting complete removal could put vital parts of the brain in danger of being damaged during the craniotomy. After treatment has been administered, observation and follow up appointments are important, because highgrade gliomas (like glioblastoma multiforme) have a tendency to regrow. This is because it is impossible to remove every single cancer cell in the brain, so the ones that are left unharmed by treatment reproduce and recreate the tumor. The extremely fast growth rate of glioblastomas is why long-term survival is rare. Treatment serves to prolong the lifespan of the patient, and improve the quality of life. Research is being conducted to discover methods of prolonging the lives of glioblastoma multiforme victims. Some techniques are more effective than others, and doctors are now able to extend the lifespan of these patients more than ever before. There has been significant progress, and the average lifespan of a patient with a glioblastoma has increased substantially. Although the gains may be small, they could add up to a substantial amount of information in the future. In the words of Will Rogers, “Even if you’re on the right track, you’ll get run over if you just sit there.” There have been cures found for cancers thought to be irrepressible, so let’s keep taking baby steps to reach the ultimate goal. The Suit in the Room by Annie Jones CHARACTERS CRYSTAL- 34 year old mother, warned down, mother look, married to Josh JOSH- 36 year old father, plays professional baseball, husband of Crystal, wearing a ball cap. PLACE A boy’s bedroom in a suburban home. TIME Late afternoon around four. [Lights up in a boy’s bedroom. A made bed centers the room. Crystal is standing with her arms folded, looking at a suit on the bed and two ties next to it. Josh enters, creaking the door open.] JOSH: Hey I’m back. [Crystal remains silent, looking at the suit.] What are you up to? [No reaction from Crystal, Josh looks defeated.] …Crystal. [Crystal turns her head to look at him then returns to looking at the tie] I’m home. CRYSTAL: I know. JOSH: Did you have company today? CRYSTAL: No. JOSH: Cuz… there’s two bottles of wine in the trash can. CRYSTAL: I know. JOSH: [Looks shocked then annoyed.] Whatever…. What are you doin? CRYSTAL: I’m just trying to figure out what tie to put with the suit. [Gestures to the bed.] JOSH: Why do you have Sam’s confirmation suit out? [Crystal glares at him and Josh looks embarrassed.] …Oh. Sorry, I should have figured. CRYSTAL: Yeah. So what tie? JOSH: I don’t know. CRYSTAL: Well he has to wear something. JOSH: What about the baseball uniform? CRYSTAL: Oh thanks for the reminder. You need to get it out and throw it away. [Josh looks shocked.] JOSH: Throw it away? CRYSTAL: That’s what I said. [Still looking at the suit.] JOSH: But… CRYSTAL: What? JOSH: Nevermind. [He walks to the closet but stops when Crystal asks again.] CRYSTAL: But what, Josh? JOSH: I just thought… CRYSTAL: Yeah? JOSH: I just thought that maybe CRYSTAL: [sighs.] spit it out. JOSH: Maybe… he could wear it. CRYSTAL: Well that sure as hell isn’t happening. JOSH: It was just a suggestion… CRYSTAL: A stupid one. [silence. Josh looks around the floor.] …I think I like the blue tie. JOSH: He hates blue… CRYSTAL: How would you know? [silence.] To the Moon and Back by Meghan McAneny JOSH: what’s wrong with his uniform? CRYSTAL: [Sighs.] Josh, I just don’t want him wearing it. Get rid of it. End of story. [She picks up both ties.] JOSH: Okay… Sorry. I was just thinking of Sammie… He really likes his uniform. I mean, he did sleep in it for an entire week. CRYSTAL: Dammit! [She throws down the ties and looks right at Josh] He’s not wearing the uniform. So just stop! JOSH: Why are you being so selfish? CRYSTAL: [Gasps.] Me selfish? JOSH: Yes. CRYSTAL: Where have you been Josh? Huh? JOSH: That’s not… CRYSTAL: How dare you call me selfish? [She pokes Josh’s chest.] How dare you say that while all this week I’ve been planning and running myself crazy and all you have been doing is hanging with the guys. [ Shakes her head.] But ya know what? … I’m selfish… I’m so selfish planning MY OWN son’sJOSH: He’s my son too. CRYSTAL: Really? Cuz last time I checked you were too busy playing ball to be here for his fifth birthday. Too busy to come to his kindergarten graduation. Too busy for his little league games. Too busy to be here to save his li- JOSH: Don’t you dare blame is death on me [Beat.]… Don’t you even dare. I might not have been here, because I work, but at least I wasn’t passed out drunk while my five year old son ran into the road. CRYSTAL: Too pick up a baseball! A baseball! Do you know why he was playing baseball in the yard Josh? Because he wanted to impress his father when he came home… ha, some role model. JOSH: Who else was he going to look up to? His depressed alcoholic mother? [Crystal smacks him across the face. Josh takes his hand to his face, surprised.] CRYSTAL: [calming down] Maybe I wouldn’t have been depressed if you even stopped to notice me. To notice us. JOSH: I thought you knew what you were getting into when you married me. You knew I was going to be gone for work. You can’t hate me for having a job. CRYSTAL: But it’s not just the games or the traveling, Josh. You’re not even here when you are in the same room with us… [Sighs] me. And now when I need you more than ever, you’re out with your buddies from the team. And I’m alone. I have to deal with all this alone. “AN ACCIDENT THAT COULD HAVE BEEN STOPPED.” JOSH: Well how are we supposed to get through this together Crystal? You’ve been a zombie since that day. It’s not like I can talk to you. And I can’t be in this house, standing in his room and waiting for him to come back. It’s too hard Crystal. I can’t do it. CRYSTAL: [Crystal starts breathing heavy] Well, then maybe you should leave. JOSH: Maybe I should! CRYSTAL: Go ahead then! JOSH: I will! [ Josh stomps out and slams the door. Crystal falls down to the ground and begins to cry. The door creeks open and Josh comes back in. and sits on the floor next to Crystal.] CRYSTAL: My baby’s gone Josh. He’s gone. JOSH: I know. CRYSTAL: And it’s all my fault. JOSH: No its not. I shouldn’t have said that it was I didn’t mean it. CRYSTAL: It is my fault. JOSH: It couldn’t have been. It was an accident. CRYSTAL: An accident that could have been stopped. JOSH: What happened? CRYSTAL: I was drinking, like you said. I had a long day, mom had called and was ranting and I had driven Sam to different birthday parties. Well, Sammie came in and asked me to come play baseball outside with him so he could practice for his game. He said it had to be perfect because you were coming home. I told him to run along and start without me so I could put on my shoes. So I drank another glass, put on my shoes, and went outside. But he had already run into the road. The truck driver was already calling 911 and Sam was already gone. [Her breath caught and she sobbed.] He was so helpless. All I could do was hold him and cry. Because I was too late. Because I wasn’t a good mom. Because I wasn’t there to tell him to wait. I wasn’t there to say it’s just a ball. I wasn’t there. JOSH: I should have been here. CRYSTAL: It wouldn’t have made a difference. JOSH: Yes it would have. [Silence.] You didn’t have to raise him by yourself and because of me you did. CRYSTAL: What do we do now? JOSH: We live with it. And stick together. It’s all we can do. CRYSTAL: You don’t hate me? JOSH: Not as much as I hate myself. But we can try and get through it together. Just no more drinking, okay? CRYSTAL: What about the team? JOSH: I’m taking the season off. CRYSTAL: Really? JOSH: Yes. I need some time with my wife. Some time to mourn. CRYSTAL: I’ve been too busy planning to mourn. “Our boy will look very nice.” JOSH: What else needs to be done? CRYSTAL: Just figuring out what he’s wearing and well there’s something I just can’t bear to go get. Just picking it out would just make everything too real. JOSH: I’ll take care of it tomorrow. CRYSTAL: You don’t have to. JOSH: I do. [Silence.] …How tall is he? CRYSTAL: 3-8 I think. [Josh nods, gulps throat. stands up.] I think he’d like the red tie. He was a Reds fan after all. CRYSTAL: Are you sure you’re okay with that? JOSH: Yeah. [Josh tears up.] Our boy will look very nice. [Josh exits room] CRYSTAL: Yes he will. [Stands up, gets ball cap by his bedside and sits it on the suit. Collapses back onto the bed and begins to cry again. Blackout.] THOUGHTS BY: MADDIE PARASKOS Slowly and softly, it started to descend. Twisting through the air in curves and bends, Caught on a silver, translucent thread It spells out a word, never to be said. Twisting, tumbling, spinning around Taking its time on its way to the ground. Brushing the earth with wings of light, Its heart thrumming with its might. A shadow slips, a hiss of ice Avoidance would not suffice. It conquers the mind, the soul Its footprints left, like a stumbling foal. Its branches reach high, its roots grow deep And in its eyes, fire does weep Branding its words on everything it may reach, Fighting the mind, so someday it might breach. The barriers of the world descends, Its shackles at its end, And in the heart something stirs, A monster of the mind, a madness, a cure. Mind of a Child By Abigail Walouke Time Forever. Your laugh. By: Allison Ridener Lost in the dark abyss, Your smile. A cold breath upon my neck signals its time. Wondering what happened to you. Your face. A shadowy hand engulfs me. Is it my fault? Fear, anger, despair. Then time goes on without a care. My heart almost stops, Yet someone else’s has. The darkest place in the room, Why wasn’t I there? I ask these questions with despair. I’ve searched for answers and realize, But all of you will be missed. Forever. Back in the present, I keep telling myself to never look back. I couldn’t speak, But that’s next to the impossible. I’ve never felt so weak. There’s no escape from reality. Now I look back, The door shuts on the happiest day, Gone along with you into that dark abyss, This is the first time I’ve really cried. Is filled with gloom. It’s too late. All gone. Into the past, And tears threaten me as I try to remember, But the pain fades slowly. I kept thinking, And dreaming. Dreaming of the day, We’ll be together again. And she enters. Your laugh, your smile, your face. My heart snaps in two, But I’ve forgotten. At all times. Realizing that you, I hold the memories still, And I’ve found that, Are gone. But the most important parts are missing. Time heals all wounds. So I keep this in mind, Chaos by Abigail Walouke Watervale Woman Stephanie Schoenlein It was late August and the days were long. The northern Michigan weather was cold enough to keep you wanting a sweatshirt, but warm enough for the Watervale guests to enjoy a peaceful vacation on Lower Herring Lake. Waitresses in the traditional uniform, a knee-length white dress and apron, zipped around Watervale Inn’s dining hall. They disappeared behind the large kitchen doors, then slipped between tightly packed tables draped in peach linen to deliver a four-course dinner. Chefs prepared meals in the steamy kitchen to be whisked away into the fancy dining area. Waiters poured drinks for the elegantly dressed Watervale guests that eagerly awaited the mushroom soup. The atmosphere was noisy but peaceful, and quite familiar to the staff that stayed all summer long working at the old, quaint resort town. Back then the staff worked long hours, getting up early to prepare breakfast and staying up late to clean up dinner. In between, they cleaned and provided maintenance to the colorful nineteenth century cottages in preparation for the arriving guests that seemed to never stop coming. But it’s late August, which means the work season is almost over. There was relatively less guests, and less guests meant more parties. Late on a surprisingly warm night, after the kitchen was cleaned to the very last chocolate mousse dish, the waiters of the Music Box invited the waitresses of the Hen House to an end-of-summer party. Late at night, everyone still in their uniform, the young staff walked along the skinny gravel roads through Watervale. Streetlights were sparse in Watervale. There were no lights on the tennis court in the park behind the Inn. There were no lights on the only paved road leading to Lake Michigan. In the places where a think canopy of trees blocked out every ounce of rich moonlight it was so dark you couldn’t see your own hand in front of you. Only the lights from inside the petite cottages provided a dull yellow glow that faded out before it reached the road. The long dock in front of the Inn was dark and still. Moonlight poured over Lower Herring Lake. Watervale was so quiet at night crickets sounded as loud as a concert, until the Music Box came into view. Parties at the Box started late and ended early. The entire time music was blasting through the windows and out the door. Everyone laughed and danced. Summer and work were almost over. The college kids wanted to live it up. After all, they only had a few more weeks together before everyone packed up and went back to school until next year. That’s when someone in the crowd yelled over the blaring music: “Hey! Let’s go to the Big Apple!” “Yeah! Let’s have a good time, have a few drinks.” The Idea was a hit with the half-sober crowd. The staff piled into their cars, fitting as many people in each vehicle as they could. Everyone pulled out of the gravel lot and whipped around the winding streets in the pitch black night. Then they past the dainty “Welcome to Watervale” sign that stands at the point where gravel meets concrete and the makeshift streets become Watervale Road. The trucks and vans turned right and headed south down M22, a highway with hardly any street lights. Finally, they sped to Arcadia to party at the Big Apple restaurant and bar. Since the staff spent the entire summer together, most of them ended up dating. The trip to the Big Apple became couples night out. Everyone had one drink too many, the large crowd swaying to music and cheering periodically for no reason. While the many couples were laughing and dancing at the bar, one couple found themselves in a heated argument. Everyone knew that they had been dating for a while, maybe even before the summer started and into previous years. At first, it was just quiet banter. Both probably had way too much to drink. Soon it grew into full-fledged shouting. Some staff tried to ignore the angry couple; close friends tried to intervene, but to no avail. Today no one recalls what they were arguing about. Finally, the staff heard from across the bar: “That’s it! I’m done.” They watched the Watervale waitress storm out the door. “Where are you going? You didn’t even drive a car here!” The frustrated waiter ran after her. The waitress waved him off, stomping out of the parking lot. She had decided to walk. The waiter huffed, then turned for the door. She could walk home. The Big Apple isn’t that far from Watervale. Probably just a few miles. It was past midnight. The drunk waitress wandered down the side of M22 in her white dress and apron uniform. Dark trees from the surrounding woods loomed overhead like dark towers piercing night sky. A car or two passed occasionally, their bright headlights illuminating the highway for a split second, but none of them stopped. She wished they had. The walk was longer than she anticipated. The waitress was exhausted and drinking too much made her feel lethargic. She staggered on for a little longer. Her feet dragged behind her. All she wanted was to rest. Her head was spinning. She should have just apologized at the bar and stayed. The waitress trekked along the side of the road, looking for Watervale. It had to be there somewthere. She had been walking for what seemed like forever. Where was that darn “Welcome to Watervale” sign? She sighed and sat down. A little rest wouldn’t hurt, right? The night was so warm and peaceful. Just a small break. That was all she wanted. She was exhausted, and the alcohol made it worse. Just a rest. That’s it. But the crickets chirped a lullaby. The brilliant stars that shined clear as day were tucking her in, and the warm gust whispered goodnight. On the side of M22, just before Watervale Road, the waitress had fallen asleep. The steering wheel acted as a drum set to the waitress’s boyfriend. The rest of the rowdy staff that had carpooled with him sang along to the radio. They were on their way back to Watervale. The staff would have stayed at the Big Apple longer, but they all had work the next morning. The car swerved from lane to lane. The waiter wasn’t paying attention. He would constantly change the radio station to find the perfect song, then swerve back into his own lane. His friends didn’t think much of his drunk driving. It was dark, no street lights up ahead. They were getting close to Watervale. The boyfriend twisted the dial, swerved into the other lane and jerked back. Then there was a thwadump. The car bounced and the other waiters silenced. “What the heck was that?” A girl from the backseat of the van asked. The car continued down the road, the driver responding, “How should I know? I didn’t see it.” “You probably just hit an animal. There’s woods everywhere ‘round here.” Someone else from the back said. “Just keep going. We’re almost home.” The boyfriend shrugged and sped down the road. He turned and past the “Welcome to Watervale” sign next to the park. After parking the car, the staff climbed out and hustled to their cabins. The girls kept the Hen House’s lights off so they wouldn’t wake their waitress friend who went home early, so they didn’t realize that her cot was still empty. Breakfast in the morning was just as crazy as dinner in the evening. You have the early birds who come in at eight o’clock sharp, still in their clothes that smell like bonfire smoke, rubbing their tired eyes. Then you have the late risers who roll in wearing clean new clothes with their hair actually brushed. All of them come in hungry and expect fast service and coffee right when they sit down. So when the staff was one waitress short the morning after the Big Apple party, everyone was hurting. They assumed she must have been really smashed from last night and just overslept. When the waiters and cooks had asked where she was, one of the other waitresses said she hadn’t noticed her that morning and thought she already left for work. Breakfast continued on without her. After the dishes were cleaned, the girls went back to the Hen House to look for the missing waitress. They opened the creaking screen door, called her name, and checked her room. Nothing. She wasn’t at the Hen House. Her bed was just as she had left it, made up nice and neat the way the staff makes the beds in the cottages every week. The girls sprinted outside, meeting up with the waiters from the Music Box. “She’s not there!” The waitresses panicked. “Nowhere to be found.” “Alright.” The boyfriend said. He tried to remain calm. “We’ll head back up to Arcadia. Maybe she stopped at a motel or something.” The staff piled into the vans and bolted out of Watervale. All of them glanced nervously out each window. The waitress was nice, liked by everyone. Where could she had gone? The boyfriend slammed his foot on the breaks, the cars behind him jerking to a stop. He jumped out of his car, flinging the door shut. The other staff poked their heads out the window and eventually got out. There she was, the missing waitress, laying on the side of the road. She was dead. Hit by a car. Over the following years, many guests have reported seeing a ghostly woman in a white dress wandering Watervale late at night or just before dawn. Guests reported seeing her stagger down the sidewalk in front of The Margaret cottage, heading to the Inn. Today, she is commonly known as the Watervale Woman. The Margaret By Stephanie Schoenlein we thought we were siamese (though we weren't always conjoined) and when we realized our necks had molded we slumped on to my pleather couch and pretended our nickel eyes saw the same silver in between its cushions. my lips were metallic, but you didn't care: your mouth was locked on a straw-flavored boy. you liked that the straw pricked your lips enough to draw blood, and it wasn't until the guillotine severed our neck that i realized that's what i was tasting. i have never tasted love and i can see in your eyes (in your contact photo that lit my phone with green when you called) you think i never will. but we were conjoined once and though you scattered that boy to the wind none of those who warmed you have made you anything more than a cheesecake girl with leather boots and a raven-feather heart. (i think that's why i answered when you lit my phone with green sunday before last.) i too long to fly–but i sought solace in paper wings tales of cinnamon loves that lasted long as Nokias or shriveled like my diligence on that sunday when you called. i think i wouldn't care if my heart was cleaved like our neck: so long as i could taste berry blood as i kissed the raven who made my paper wings fly. you claim you've been there, but all you've kissed are bluejays (though there is a mottled one that heaves twigs on to your shoulders). but you've never wept robin's eggs because the blood you've tasted has never been made of berries. (but my phone is green again.) i know this is about the bluejay who makes your raven-feather heart race to the edge of the mulberry cliff. but you've never wept robin's eggs because the blood you've tasted has never been made of berries. (but my phone is green again.) i know this is about the bluejay who makes your raven-feather heart race to the edge of the mulberry cliff. (you don't know what i know– his feeble wings won't catch you on the way down.) but birds chirp in the air. (my phone is still green.) and as i answer, i pretend when the screen against my ear glows red, you won't forget the way my name tastes– you will remember not to leave; you will remember we were siamese. Ying Yang by Samantha Jo Giesel we thought we were siamese Jessica Sommerville By Katie Bill Where My Heart is at You can find my heart in the depths of summer, When the sun sizzles and the cicadas croak, Where the sun burns intensely through skin You can find my heart in the silence of the outside world, Where trees decorate surrounding barriers of the scene, Where the birds softly sing sweet melodies You can find my heart at the sandy shores of the beach, Where the seashells are a treasure to observe and collect, Where the soul can find peace and complete relaxation in the presence of the salty waves and gentle breeze You can find my heart at the serene lake far from the busy world, Where the water wake waves softly sways, Where the world slows down and time is just a number You can find my heart floating through the fields, Where the fresh flowers blossom, Where the grass grows and covers the earth You can find my soul, My passion, My inspiration, My happiness, My joy, You can find me, In these places, Where my heart is Forest Dweller by Kate Mroczka There are always cheesy potatoes. Always. Usually there are two pans of them, made and placed meticulously by my Aunt Madonna, a pious woman whose hair is – unfortunately – stuck in 1971, along with her wardrobe. Even though my mother, my step-dad, my brother, and I are always late, the cheesy potatoes are always inexplicably warm. The perfect temperature. Not hot enough for the cheese to be dripping out of the sides of the pan, but not cold enough for it to congeal into a school lunch-esque cube. Potatoes, cream cheese, and butter. So much butter. And of course, bread crumbs, because who doesn’t need more carbs? For some reason, (like Shakespeare) you just Butterfly by Madison McConkie can’t get enough of them. They’re like dessert potatoes. Next to the cheesy potatoes is a crock pot of green bean great-grandparents -- my mom’s dad’s parents to be exact -- and casserole, also made by the gifted Aunt Madonna. Not that no one the parents of seven children who are my great aunts and uncles. else cooks -- they do. But it’s Aunt Madonna’s food that is And no, they were not merely referred to as Dick and Mary Ann. unchanging year after year. It simply wouldn’t be the same if were one entity: Dick-and-Mary Ann, fused in my memory anyone else made it. I have had cheesy potatoes other places, but They like the foods we always ate together. As I avoided spilling green they aren’t Aunt Madonna’s and they aren’t nearly as delicious. It bean casserole on my frilly white dress one Easter, I listened to my turns out the silly old adage is true; everything tastes better when great grandma and discuss the time they spent helping it’s made with love. The same green bean casserole that used to their friends build agrandpa barn from ground up. It amazed me how make me run wailing is now my favorite family staple. It’s always little I knew about them, and I the loved listening in on their stories. It in the same crock pot – dark green interior with blue and pink was from this knowledge of their past that I gained a newfound flowers around the outside. It’s always placed on the same hot pad, respect, not only for them, but for everyone in my family, and for burned on the edges. The green beans are always kind of mushy, myself, that lives on even though Dick-and-Mary Ann are gone. blending with the cream of mushroom soup. Don’t forget the A few years later, I remember carefully spooning cheesy French fried onions. potatoes, green bean casserole, and cranberry sauce onto my paper I can always count on a heaping helping of warm cheesy plate in separate spots -- never touching -- while Rachel followed potatoes and green bean casserole, even when I can’t count on an A me in line, waiting for me to finish so that we could scurry down to in chemistry or delivering a smooth English presentation. Aunt Madonna’s basement and work Contrasting nicely with the on our latest criminal investigation. As cheesy potatoes and green bean “I like to see people run to each other, I like an only child at the time, hanging out casserole is the year-round cranberry with Rachel allowed me to explore the the kissing and the crying, I like the sauce. It’s made by my Aunt Doris. improbable and the impossible. She impatience, the stories that the mouth Much like my Aunt Madonna, she has taught me to ask questions about the not changed her hair since she got can't tell fast enough, the ears that aren't things we can’t see. married to my Uncle Ron. Unlike my At the age of twelve, I was big enough, the eyes that can't take in all Aunt Madonna, she is not quite as finally “cool” enough to sit at the table pious and not quite as even-tempered. of the change, I like the hugging, the with my Aunt Cara, who is six years The cranberry sauce is gelatin – I think. older than me and best friends with bringing together, the end of missing I honestly have no idea. It’s made of some of the older cousins in my family. little bits of cranberries in a semisomeone.” –Jonathan Safran Foer, That Christmas, she spilled cranberry gelatinous reddish sauce with miniExtremely Loud and Incredibly Close sauce all over her brand new creammarshmallows floating around in it. colored sweater. I gasped -if it had And it doesn’t really taste like been me, I would have cried. Instead, cranberries. Yes, cranberry sauce is usually found at most simply wiped it off and burst out laughing. She has shown me Thanksgiving tables. But this is not just Thanksgiving. Cranberry she how laugh at myself and have fun -- even when things aren’t sauce is found at every single family get-together. Whether it’s a goingtomy She’s a risk-taker. Fortunately, this has rubbed off birthday, Christmas, or Easter, the same family is always there -- on me andway. left me with some amazing memories and plans for the crazy Uncle Tom, chatty Aunt Kathy, the whole gang. future. I could always count on my cousin Rachel, who is one Cheesy potatoes, green bean casserole, and cranberry year older than me, to help me solve the case of the missing Easter sauce. Dick-and-Mary Ann, Rachel, Aunt Cara. Respect, curiosity, egg or discover the forgotten family ghost. Except now, instead of risk-taking. All three perfect. I can’t say for sure where I’ll be in helping me navigate fictional life mysteries, as we devour our five years, or what college I’ll end up at, or even what I’ll wear second helping of cheesy potatoes, she helps me navigate the very tomorrow. But I can say with certainty that I’ll be spending real mysteries of senior year. Thanksgiving and all future holidays with people I love, And at the head of the table every time was Dick-and- listening to and laughing at the stories I’vethe heard million times, Mary Ann. When I was younger, they sat in chairs side by side, and eating cheesy potatoes, green bean casserole, aand -- of course both heading up the same end of the family table. They were my - cranberry sauce. The Writer’s Dictionary The Writer’s Maya Malaviya Dictionary Maya Malaviya “Based off of a true story.” (phrase.) get ready for a landslide of feelings because this is the real life. It is not just fantasy. They’re caught in a landslide, no escape from reality. “This movie was based off of a book.” (phrase.) the ultimate destroyer of the pure image in your head. Analyze (v.) Run. Run away immediately. Abort mission. Avoid assignment at all costs. Annotate (v.) scribbling your racing thoughts in a fashion which has you wonder why people don’t just comprehend squiggles instead. Assigned Novel (n.) the book everyone complains about for lack of plot and too much nothing. (little do they know it’s 5% about the plot and 95% about the character development) Author (n.) one who writes experiences in hopes that it will impact others. Autobiography (n.) how the author wants you to see them. Blogging (v.) second-guessing your reading thoughts. “based off of a true story” • dialogue “based off of a true story” • dialogue Blurb (n.) paragraph on the back cover which never fails to contain and explain the largest spoiler of the book you were almost interested in. Book Hangover (n.) the result of finishing a book, then realizing that it’s all over, you’ll never interact with those characters, and that there’s actually an outside world you’ve been avoiding. Bookmark (n.) you own a thousand of these little slips, but if you truly need one, you look to your latest grocery receipt instead. Bookshelf (n.) display of books where you realize: the more creases on the spines, the more loved they look. (often arranged alphabetically and/or by color) Bookstore (n.) overpriced library. Bookworm (n.) the wisest and most experienced of them all (or the one who thinks so, anyway). Character (n.) the messenger of the ideas and the puppet of the author. Classic (n.) the books neither teacher nor student wants to admit they hate. Dialogue (n.) gasps for air in a sea of details. dictionary • writing Dictionary (n.) words attempting to explain words in an alphabetical manner. MLA Format (n.) format of “essay” with thousands of criterion. You always miss one. Double-Spacing (v.) wasting paper. Mood (n.) see Tone Dystopian Novel (n.) a preview into the possible future. End of Chapter (n.) cliffhanger and the sole purpose for a bookworm’s sleepless night. English Teacher (n.) dictator of diction and president of punctuation Essay (n.) Paragraphs? Timed? Words? Oh my. Fiction (n.) nonfiction in disguise. Hardback Books (n.) the overrated version of paperback novels which are impossible to truly break in (although they do come with lovely built-in bookmarks) Independent Reading Novel (n.) a book within the fourth grade reading curriculum that you remember enough to analyze for blogging. Library (n.) horrendously underrated save haven containing free books. Nonfiction (n.) sequence of facts or events which have been proven true. Paranormal Romance (n.) a book or series, containing vampires, werewolves, or both. Often supports the theme “age is just a number”, even if the cute male is 1,542 years old. Plot (n.) when original, the greatest component of a book. Teen Fiction (n.) cliché romance novel featuring the non-traditionally beautiful, unrealistically smart, sarcastic, yet somehow still independent girl.’ Tone (n.) see Mood Topic (n.) recurring person, place, or thing in a book (seldom original) Word count (n.) encourages a whole new way of using 100 words to say what could’ve been said in one sentence. Writing (v.) can’t help but love it.