This document is an introduction to an anthology of young writers. It acknowledges the support from donors, partners, and volunteers that make the Young Writers Project possible. The introduction discusses how the Project gives a voice to young writers and has grown over the years to support thousands of students through publications, online communities, school programs, events, and college mentors.
This document is an introduction to an anthology of young writers. It acknowledges the support from donors, partners, and volunteers that make the Young Writers Project possible. The introduction discusses how the Project gives a voice to young writers and has grown over the years to support thousands of students through publications, online communities, school programs, events, and college mentors.
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Young Writers Project Anthology 3 is our organization's third compilation of best work drawn from 7,000+ submissions of writing and 1,000 pieces of art. YWP is a nonprofit dedicated to engaging kids to write, helping them get better at it and providing them with authentic audiences for their work. For more, go to youngwritersproject.org
This document is an introduction to an anthology of young writers. It acknowledges the support from donors, partners, and volunteers that make the Young Writers Project possible. The introduction discusses how the Project gives a voice to young writers and has grown over the years to support thousands of students through publications, online communities, school programs, events, and college mentors.
This document is an introduction to an anthology of young writers. It acknowledges the support from donors, partners, and volunteers that make the Young Writers Project possible. The introduction discusses how the Project gives a voice to young writers and has grown over the years to support thousands of students through publications, online communities, school programs, events, and college mentors.
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Anthology 3
Young Writers Project
Back cover photo by Jason Ro| Back cover poem by O||v|a P|nta|r Anthology 3 Young Writers Project 2 Acknowledgments Young Writers Project is made possible by hundreds of people who have donated money, time, expertise, ideas and advice: from students and teachers to business leaders and professional writers, from arts organizations and media outlets to educational experts and foundations. So many people make this project possible. Each week, YWP publishes great student writing in 12 newspapers: St. Albans Messenger, Essex Reporter, Colchester Sun, Burlington Free Press, Stowe Reporter, Waterbury Record, Times Argus, Rural Route Today, Addison Independent, Rutland Herald, The Valley News and Brattleboro Reformer. We also select one piece and accompanying podcast when available for Vermont Public Radio on vpr.net. Thanks to each for their generosity in affirming students ideas, opinions and creativity. 5pccIa! thanks tn nur majnr dnnnrs: Bay & Paul Foundations, A.D. Henderson Foun- dation, Green Mountain Coffee Roasters, FairPoint Communications, Vermont Community Foundation, Windham Foundation, National Life Group, KeyBank, Main Street Landing, Susan Cross and our founding sponsor, Vermont Business Roundtable. Board chairman Stephen Kiernan has been instrumental in helping the organization grow; his energy has been a lifeblood for YWP, its staff and its financial stability. And to YWPs board members past and present, including: Douglas Beagley, Suzanne Beste, Lynne Bond, Luanne Cantor, Tom Carlson, Lucy Comstock-Gay, Dave Demers, Barbara Ganley, Hasse Halley, Sabina Haskell, Rick Machanic, Michael Mathon, Molly McClaskey, Rachel Morton, Bobbe Pen- nington, Alysia Perkinson, Sara Quayle, Jeffrey Rutenbeck, Bob Stevens, Marc & Dana van- derHeyden and Lisa Ventriss who all helped push our ideas further. Thanks also to Melanie Roberts who designed our logo; attorneys Joe Sano and Serge Bechade of Prince Lobel Tye in Boston; and Virginia Roberts who helps with the books. This book was made possible by YWP board member Kathy Folley who has donated countless hours of help proofreading, selecting work and mentoring teachers; her tireless spirit, knowledge and understanding of writing and kids have been immeasurable. Kate Fallone, now getting her Masters in Education at UVM, has been remarkable in her tal- ent and hard work and, with Renate Dubois, a senior at University of Maine Farmington, has helped pull together the initial selection list. Susan Reid, YWPs new content coordina- tor, proofread the book several times. Andrea Gray, our graphic designer, and Queen City Printing once again did their magic. My hearfelt thanks to our finalist judges Bill Schubart, Phoebe Stone and Erik Esckilsen, three superb writers who set aside their writing projects to read and select the student work in this book. A special thanks goes to Physicians Computer Company and one of its founders and YWP board member John Canning. In early 2007, I received an email from John, posted at 3:29 a.m. typically enough, introducing himself and asking, How can we help? Oh my, let me count the ways. John has been an inspiration to me and this organization; his gen- erosity, ideas and expertise in building nonprofits has been critical to our success and is a major reason why we are dedicating this book to his company. Because PCCs support goes way beyond John. A host of others have willingly offered ideas, advice, technical help and expertise. A few who should be singled out: Deb Bergeron and Jen Loiselle for their patience and help with innumerable projects big and small; others include Katy Demong, Bill and Paula VanDeVenter, Chip Hart, Erica Greenwood, Jay Schuster and Brandon Smith. Thanks to all of you for supporting young writers, our next generation of words and ideas. Nurture them well. Geoffrey Gevalt, YWP director and founder 3 We are pleased to dedicate this anthology to Physicians Computer Company, an organization that has unwavering belief in the value of young people. PCCs support is deeply appreciated.
4 NataIIe Puma ChampIaIn VaIIey UnIon HIgh SchooI, Crade 11 5 Introduction
If Vermont had tall buildings, skyscrapers even, I might be able to craft an elevator pitch that I could complete by the 101st floor. But maybe not. Young Writers Project enters its sixth year as full and complex as ever with components that many including you readers may not realize. For instance, we are partnering with a school in Shanghai, China, and another in Uganda, all with an idea of bringing Vermont students together with kids who live in different worlds. We now work with well over 12 percent of students in grades 4-12 in Vermont. Our after school Web site now boasts nearly 1,000 visitors a day. We have four fabulous former teachers in the field helping teachers make the transition to the Digital Age. And and and. Whew. I think were at Vermonts top floor. Let me express it to you this way. The book in your hands right now represents our main purpose: give audience to as many young writers as possible, particularly those who, before they encountered us, might have told you that they thought writing was, well, boring and pointless and not something they could do well. We believe that, as a first step, giving students authentic audience affirms their ideas, creativity and sense of worth. It also gives them purpose and the confidence to express what they observe, think and believe. YWP began as an idea to show that writing is vital to a childs development and that more attention must be given to its instruction. We began as a newspaper feature in 2003, became an independent nonprofit in 2006 and have grown to a multi-faceted digital learning enterprise. With a tiny staff, YWP: 5c!ccts and pub!Ishcs bcst studcnt wnrk in 12 newspapers and Vermont Public Radio each week during the school year. Since 2006, we have received nearly 30,000 submissions. Maintains a civil, student-led nn!Inc wrItIng cnmmunIty, youngwritersproject.org, that has approximately 4,000 active Vermont and New Hampshire teen users. Runs the YWP 5chnn!s Prnjcct, a comprehensive writing program for schools that includes yearlong teacher training and leading-edge private Web sites for teachers and students to use as digital extensions of their classrooms. In 2011/12 we are working with 50+ schools, 500+ teachers and 8,000+ students. Sponsors monthly slams and pcrInrmancc wrItIng cvcnts as well as a variety of wnrkshnps and other programs in our Winooski headquarters and around the state. Works with colleges in Vermont and New Hampshire to provide trained college mcntnrs who give feedback to young writers.
Thats a lot. And we keep long hours, stay up late at night, stretch our knowledge and capabilities, say yes to most anything the kids want to do because of the little things those moments when we realize that just by gaining an audience, young peoples views of themselves have changed. A secret: I love calling the kids in this book to tell them their work was chosen out of 7,000 others as the best of the best. If only we could bottle their reactions; if only we could share their joy and pride and giddiness, wed probably be able to cure the Monday morning blues, the bleakness of rainy days or, well, just about anything. So my thanks, as always, goes to the kids: You make my days. Cheers and keep on writing! gg 6 The Stars zzy UsIeWoIIeI 8arre Town EIementary SchooI, Crade 4 I feel like taking flight, leaving my troubles behind, with all my might, fly to the stars light, the Earth, blue and green. All the people who were bad, all the people who were mean, are all just ants on the world, The world of the stars, seeing Mars, and all my stress melts into space, but lonely... how I long to see your face. I cant confine, how lonely I am, I am yours, you are mine, so lets fly to space together, hand in hand, light as a feather, no rain, just fine space weather, so stars pour silver light on our dance, As I whisper into space, I no longer miss your face. That Cirl PaIge Kehoe HartIord MemorIaI MIddIe SchooI, Crade 7 Pain Needles piercing my skin Leaving ink of colors that will be forever Forever on my arm It hurts Bad It makes me question why Im doing this But only for a second Im here because Im that girl That girl who wears too much black That girl who has too many piercings And soon to be that girl with a tattoo The rebel Me Its who I am Maybe not who I want to be But theres no turning back Ive made that girl Me Theres nothing I can do now Its my reputation Its not easy to change a reputation So why bother Just keep going father and farther until I accept it Pain Needles piercing my skin Leaving ink of colors that will be forever Forever on my arm Because I am that girl 7 l'mFinallyDoneTryingToLookAtEverythingAtOnce Zach Ward NorthIIeId HIgh SchooI, Crade 12 Part of me feels foolish like that was ever even possible. But most of me knows no regret, just circles winding wildygrowingspinesandteethwithTIME. Its a shifting of gears, a stopping and stuttering and grinding (again to life) thats only audible when you slow your blood at night to devour, in earnest, that ancient machinery resting, silently, above us. The semblance of motionless matter that binds us, reminds us to look up when we havent got anything better to do anyways. I feel like there are continents asleep on your nightstand. I feel like there are so many roads left for us. I find myself salivating. I find myself following your hoarse laughter through time, changing slowly, shifting and churning like a pair of runaway stars nestled in not-knowing, orbiting one another. And I guess Ive been holding on to this, like one of the many-colored pens inside my back pocket that I fumble for when life begins to roar, like television static, and I dont have the heart to dial it back in again. KatIe SmIth Essex High School, Grade 10 8 8rendan Patneaude ChampIaIn VaIIey UnIon HIgh SchooI, Crade 10 Andrew LemIeux ChampIaIn VaIIey UnIon HIgh SchooI, Crade 12 9 Antiquity 8raeden Hughes Mount MansIIeId UnIon HIgh SchooI, Crade 10 In the chipped paint and overgrown violets of half-abandoned houses, Im dancing at the fringes, trailing my fingers along peeled railings and neglected vines. Because theres something magnificent about old houses: something in the scent of ancient wallpaper, elegance in the water-stained floorboards and sun-splintered shingles. Antique is precious because You cannot fool Time, and History is embedded in the very heart of civilization (and its materialism). We hoard because the story of something is often just as beautiful as the thing itself. We live lives full of circles, intersecting with the minds and bodies of other humans, yet the allure of relationships is the chance to truly understand someone. Whether or not we like it, we carry our stories around with us. They shape our minds and our actions and in time, we become our history, and our houses. The Closet Speaks Meghan LavoIe RIce MemorIaI HIgh SchooI, Crade 10 A faux cashmere wrap, green like unripe kiwis lining the bottom refrigerator shelf; black seeds the iris of an omniscient core, a jade-tainted white pupil. Threads peppered with deoxygenated fragments of leaves, a brown-veined stem, twisted by youthful fingers, once bursting in the harvest of autumns past. From the day I pretended to be a Grecian princess. And cloaked my body in the finest silks east of the Adriatic. Sandals were the only thing I was missing. Seven-button sweater; plain, unassuming. Yet sponge of the saline Niagara. Half-hearted cornflower blue with cerulean tones to match the oceans deepest trench that day. Too loose around the middle, arm length underachieving again. But witness to the sorrow no other clothing could absorb; survivor in the woven lifeboat among a sea of fabrics. 10 Calmness Courtney CIIbert FerrIsburgh CentraI SchooI, Crade 6 The tide rolling in and out like my breath Waves crashing down upon the shore Quiet breeze A bursting sunset in the distance Waves crashing down upon the shore Calmness sets in my heart A bursting sunset in the distance Your gentle arms around me Calmness sets in my heart The beauty Your gentle arms around me Now I can sleep tonight The beauty Peaceful Now I can sleep tonight Your soft smile Peaceful Quiet breeze Your soft smile The tide rolling in and out like my breath Through the Window Abby CrowIey Mount HoIIy EIementary SchooI, Crade 3 When I get a chance to really see all the great wonders that are in front of me when I look out through the window, Why, I could see trees and buzzing bees when I look out through the window. I could see the sky, and I could see the birds that are flying high when I look up through the window. I could see Lance, one of my scurrying ants when I look down through the window. I could see trees and buzzing bees and I could see birds that are flying high and I could see Lance, one of my scurrying ants when I look all around through the window. Why, I really wish I had some time to really see the wonders that are in front of me when I look out through the window. 11 Do You? ErIn 8undock SheIburne CommunIty SchooI, Crade 7 You like me, I like him, He likes her, She likes you.
She likes you, But you like another, He likes me, And I like the other.
I think were friends, You think were more, He thinks theyre friends, But she wants to be more.
Confusing, understandable, Annoying, and crazy, The whole situations a little bit hazy.
Do you like me? Do I like you? Does he like her? Does she like him?
If she likes you, But you like another, If he likes me, And I like the other, How does this all play out? For you, For him, For her, For me, Does she like him? Does he like her? Do I like you? Do you like me? uilding Walls Sarah WeIIs U32 HIgh SchooI, Crade 10 I saw you across the way that day back in summer. You looked up and smiled at me and my feet began to float forward. Moving my feet through the grass, I saw bricks begin to block my path bit by bit. My heart leapt with panic and I began to run toward you. As I ran a seam in the sky tore and rain poured down on me, ripping holes in my conviction. Doubt began to seep in and my heart grew heavier, slowing my pace. The distance remained no matter the steps I took through the rain. The wall kept growing. Soon I began to doubt Id seen you at all, that it all was a cruel trick of the mind. I stood in the wet grass and peered through the sheets of worry. In the haze I thought I saw your shape. It was only just a shadow, but that was enough for me. The wall grew to waist level and I found myself finally blocked. I searched for the shadow, I searched for the boy who smiled. If only I realized I could climb the wall, the wall Id made. I would see you waiting for me just across the way. 12 Unconventional Couples ]uIIette Rose Wunrow U32 HIgh SchooI, Crade 11 My classes go hand-in-hand, circulating through the school hallways like unconventional couples. Pre-calculus is inseparable from U.S. history. When I allow a math problem to overwhelm me with its cunning impossibilities I think of Andrew Jackson: would he shrink before an equation? Never! He would challenge every variable to a duel until they cringed and surrendered the answer. Chemistry class hooked up with chorus. Songs are word-electrons orbiting in lip- shaped spheres around a positive pulsing core, pure and elemental. French married painting, words coloring canvases je taime red and je ne taime pas blue. And English? Its on-and-off with P.E. Some days, writing is a speed workout, arduous, drawn-out, unpleasant. Other days, its like rock climbing, searching, cautious, a little afraid. But most days, its like the high ropes course. I dangle in a chasm of nothingness, alive and acutely aware, harnessed by isolation, but made breathless by the sensation of incandescent freedom. Red ]ackson Neme The 8eIIwether SchooI, Crade 3 Red is fire Red is dust The color of dirty rust Red is your blood Red is your heart It is the bite of a sour tart Red is a morning yawn The breeze of morning dawn It is brave with all your might It is also the morning light Red is the remaining of a late dusk fight Red is a rash, the sun, roasted crisp of a hot dog bun Red is fury Red is might The argue that makes things right Red is love, the color of a mourning dove It is fall It is a fox Red is the brush of a painted box Red is a rose It is embarrassment The strongest color Red is me, you Red is the colors dew. 13 Through the Window ChrIstopher ZamarIppa TrInIty 8aptIst SchooI, Crade 7 He just sat there, frustrated, thinking of what to do. He knew his deadline was Friday and he still had nothing. All day he had been setting up different objects, trying to find the right angle, and then tearing it down, thinking it wasnt good enough. You see, the Metropolitan Museum of Art was looking for young, unknown artists all across the country, and Matthew was one of the chosen few. He just had to come up with a decent painting by Friday in order to have his work displayed there. He decided to go for a walk to try to find some inspiration. As he walked down the snow-covered sidewalk, a million pictures came to mind. He decided snow was definitely going to be in the picture. As he walked back home still thinking, someone walked up to him. It was the neighbor from across the street. She said, Matt, Im sorry, but can you watch my kids because I need to run to the store? Sure, Matt replied. He sat on the step when it suddenly came to him. He would paint those children playing in the snow. He paced back and forth, wishing Lisa would be home soon. Finally, after 15 minutes, she arrived. He rushed into his house and grabbed his utensils. Then he sat there. What viewpoint would it be from? He tried the sidewalk, steps, balcony, porch and roof, but nothing worked. Almost giving up, he went inside and sat back at his desk. He looked up, and then he finally saw it. He found his painting through the window. AIex MumIeyDupuIs Essex High School, Grade 12 14 Winter Hunting Trip CaIII 8ushee Shrewsbury MountaIn SchooI, Crade 5 The wintry frost cut through my camouflage coat, radiating icy cold heat. I could feel the snow crunch under my steel-toe boots, the leaf-colored ones that cost so much. A scentless spray covered me from head to toe, encasing me in a blank smell. My brother stepped softly down next to me, and then he gripped my sleeve. He silently pointed ahead. I looked up with curiosity. I wanted to know if he was pointing to a random piece of beauty or if we had a target. Up ahead there was a ledge about 100 feet tall; the coarse rock was comforting to me. A group of deer pawed around in the early snow on the ledge, trying to find a few shoots of grass. My brother silently slipped the rifle off his shoulder and pointed the barrel at the beating heart of the buck. I put my hand out, pushed the gun down. Dont, I breathed. The breath that came from my words was a silvery mist. My brother gave me a glance, and his face reflected my admiration of the deers grace. Together, we turned and began the long hike home. The forest was silent around us, and the only sound that could be heard was the crunch of the icy snow under our well-insulated feet. The magic lasted. ChIoe WhIte ChampIaIn VaIIey UnIon HIgh SchooI, Crade 11 15 One Year CaroIyn WoodruII ChampIaIn VaIIey UnIon HIgh SchooI, Crade 11 I have been climbing this staircase for the past ten years The wind still howls through the cracks in the brick in that same lonely way. You think youd get used to it. Well You do and you dont Still that same song that wakes you up at night Almost almost a comfort sometimes.
They say a lot can change in a year. Funny, how they never say How little. I have learned even less about these new types of love and loss. And I have hated, and gained and loved and lost
But its still a cold day in March, And Im still wearing that same old sweatshirt, And the stairs still stand, and the snow still falls And the wind still wails Between the brick. Cone LIam O`TooIe Crossett 8rook MIddIe SchooI, Crade 8 I would give away my Xbox to have a healthy family, to see my grandparents more, and for life to slow down. I would give away my phone and iPod to go on a vacation with my family, to spend a couple of weeks with just us four, no worries or complaints. I would give away my TV for the family time I never had with my cousins. Electrified Henre HermanowskI Crossett 8rook MIddIe SchooI, Crade 8 Electrified Static pulses streak through the air, leaving behind a sharp stream of light. Clouds pale gray, glow with each crack. Wind swirls, and a plethora of leaves dances in the flashing sky. 16 The Song Won't Last Emma Russo Crossett 8rook MIddIe SchooI, Crade 7 Slow down for a second, hold your breath; dont keep rushing, take a rest. Open your eyes, breathe in for a minute; life goes on, youre not in this to win it. We jump too high, we run too fast; listen to the music because the song wont last. Dont forget to remember always wear a smile; enjoy life when you can, it only lasts a while. Hold on to what you have, dont ever let go; love every moment, take life slow. We jump too high, we run too fast; listen to the music because the song wont last. Darkness is Near ]ustIn Chen RIchmond MIddIe SchooI, Crade 7 I watch as darkness starts to envelop the sky, Subjugating all but a few faint slivers of light. I poke the campfire with a long twig, urging it to stay awake, But with a final yawn and shudder, it dissipates into a snake of smoke, Twisting and writhing in the wind. The clearing around me is silent, but for the soft whispers of the ocean. Its gentle hand of water grasps at the shore, washing against the sand, And under the waning light of the horizon, I can observe its slow movements, Tired after a long day of crashing against the shore and cascading through the sand, Tired after a long struggle to reach the tree line. Sunshine is departing, chased away by the moon. But before it leaves, it hugs my shoulders and face one last time, A warm embrace of farewell. And though I know its only goodbye until tomorrow, I lament its leave, I always lament its leave. 17 CIaIre KeIIy Essex HIgh SchooI, Crade 9 18 Crying for Summer AIyx SeIIars PeopIes Academy, Crade 11 I cried again last night. There is no way of knowing when spring will finally come, and the sun will break through the mask of clouds that forms for the majority of Vermonts long year. I feel as though I wait for a wish that will never come true. For how can it? There seems to be no end and no escape. The only thing that keeps me from falling into a pit of nothingness is the light of memories. The memories of the warm summers and the fairy tale back roads leading to hidden scenery that now seems so unreal. Scattered with wild flowers and a symphony of bird songs. I sit waiting for the time when I can feel the sun radiate into my skin and warm me to my heart. The faces of these small towns, plastered pale and gray, wait with me. Some say they love the cold, the snow. That is all fine if they say so. But then, why do so many of their faces reflect my despair for the dismal darkness that is a definition for this setting? But there is more than the gray; there are the little rural towns that are scattered with a few houses and lined with great distances. The short days that bring upon a darkened night with nowhere to go but home, for no place remains open and welcome in the late night but the warm woodstove hearth. I cried again last night. For the summer that seems to become more distant as the hours, the days, pass. As I wait for the excitement to come, and a place to go, and the sun to shine, I wait, and hope that my wishes will come alive. I dont want to cry tonight. Morgan SaIIord Essex HIgh SchooI, Crade 10 19 CaraIIne FIaherty Essex HIgh SchooI, Crade 10 20 Hoping Courtney Perry 8eIIows FaIIs UnIon HIgh SchooI, Crade 12 Trickle down Turn around Sweaty hands hide Inside deep pockets Curled around a wisp of hope Soft heart beats Plodding feet Eyes may stare down But this winter breeze Carries a soul adrift In a dreaming world Sleeping world Beneath the wildest imagining Whirling Twirling A mindless dance A baseless plea
I will never be anything
More than just me Its true: Afraid to ask If that could ever Be enough for you ]ustIn PInard Essex HIgh SchooI, Crade 12 21 oulevard of the Sky KaIsang DoIkar Lyman C. Hunt MIddIe SchooI, Crade 8 I glide over the streets, (paved with the stuff of stars) below the universe, (gilded with beauty) beside the sky, (blended with the hues of a rainbow) and could not help but notice my home scattered below, like the rest of the land, [lost] between the folds of time. Poetry AIexIa Long Edmunds MIddIe SchooI, Crade 8 POH-i-tree Cryptic words that sit in semi-tangible silence on empty lips, Singing in jingle and ring that please the ear in unknown ways, Written by heretics and followers alike who chant in mordacious rhythm, All swaying to an imperceptible beat, a chimeric urge, To write Poetry Sam RobInson Essex HIgh SchooI, Crade 10 22 Whistles of the Wind 8asundhara Mukherjee South 8urIIngton HIgh SchooI, Crade 9 We are flying feathers, dancing in the shadows of the moon, dancing into the light of the sun as it wakes in the morning until we just disappear in its reflection. And we are windmills who tamper with the winds we send petals amongst the breaths and molecules and dying heartbeats; we are rooftops, broken in the center, forced to bend but its for the good of it all. We are flashing lightbulbs, singing our light out into the distance, singing into the eyes and ears until everyone can notice the flicker of the lights. And we are the pages of the books of the children worn with touches, breaths, unconditional love; we are the quills that turn into pens, wrung with ink-blotches that swim out onto white space until it becomes an array of black, but one day the black will become white again. MIchaeI Lynch Essex HIgh SchooI, Crade 11 23 When l Wear my Childhood NataIIe SenIor SheIburne CommunIty SchooI, Crade 4 My younger childhood years sit gently on the rack, waiting for more pleasure to be had. Now being more grown up is fun and all, but sometimes it just gets boring, so I put my childhood on. My childhood is pink and purple with swirls and designs, with a twist of banana, now aint that just divine! With some beads here and there, and some doodles and sketches, everywhere! With some glue and some tape and some paper too! With pictures of me, my family hey, its true! On my childhood Ive got stains and splotches, and messes too, anything from a horse to a kangeroo! With thousands of name tags here and there, with veggies like carrots, and fruits like pears! But on my childhood is a most important thing, its a glued-on shape where my heart should be. Now its not perfect, and its not the best, but what it is is my heart, and the same as the rest. sabeIIa EsposIto Essex HIgh SchooI, Crade 11 24 Cory Dawson ChampIaIn VaIIey UnIon HIgh SchooI, Crade 12 25 (Parentheses) Katy Turner 8eIIows Free Academy, Crade 12 (I think) it was in the wind the rain on black days that you wrote the sad poetry (yellow paper running ink a boy in Maine) and (I think) I loved too much and too little (things and people and hearing my name) to worry or to leave the faces I need are not the places I need nor are they in the places I need to be in Ill (maybe) sit in melancholic universe- threads while you tell me which New York school to choose and be (and live) as if Im breaking little parts to get the bigger ones as if we all deal in and fear consequence I just put the broken things (always) in my dresser or my pockets lf lt Weren't for Him Emma Sopchak Essex HIgh SchooI, Crade 11 The only thing that kept me from bolting from that church was him his hand in mine his smell and his face and his smile and his shoulder his shoulder that I rested my head on. The only thing that kept me from excusing myself and politely sprinting from that room was him sitting with me while everyone else stood and sang, and sat, and stood, and sang again. His body never moving away from me never budging, even when everyone else stood, and we were the only two who stayed. All through the service, I doodled on the program, I drew stars around the words, I colored in the spaces. And all through the service, he held my hand, and he looked at my doodles, my bursts of nervous creation, and he said, What pretty stars. What pretty stars. 26 Cardboard Walls WIIIow HoIschuh TwIn VaIIey HIgh SchooI, Crade 9 I wander an empty town where the light inside the street lamps has resided for years My thoughts bounce around inside the soft walls of my mind I walk alone, hearing only one set of footsteps treading upon the old faded concrete My deep brown eyes stare blankly into the unknown ahead I pass withering weeds, watching as the green bleeds from their stalks Abandoned houses haunt the towns neighborhoods watching with their dark windows Spirits drift aimlessly staining the air with curling tendrils of invisible white Faint whispers of lonely children echo in the effortless wind The walls of my mind are damp with tears from sad silver clouds My cardboard walls are ripping, falling apart, tearing at the taped seams My mind is a lost package in the mail bin, soggy and forgotten With an address to the abyss and a shadows kiss for a stamp I am misunderstood Miss Takes EIIzabeth CummIn Mount MansIIeId UnIon HIgh SchooI, Crade 9 Maybe I made a mistake by being born too late - for holding her fingers, slip and falling, always mistakes, mistakes. Miss Takes, come and get your test, youre failing again. Failing, Miss Takes. Miss Takes, re-takes, re-learns, never re-news that biography of Mark Twain with pictures in the middle... children never smile in old pictures. I can list all of my recorded inconsistencies, all of my wrongs, rewinding the tapes in my eyes, wallowing in the past the past has passed and Miss Takes cant re-take Life so we move on. 27 lue Ribbon Anne ]ackson FerrIsburgh CentraI SchooI, Crade 6 So much depends upon a blue ribbon with gold letters glistening in the sun with fading ruffles so perfect and straight but my girl Dena would rather have hay than a dumb blue ribbon. Where l'm From ]amIe Ray SheIburne CommunIty SchooI, Crade 3 Im from gazing at the stars Every clear night Im from my dads delicious Grilled dinners Im from the feel of damp moss squishing under my feet From the cold of winter Chilling my bones Im from the maple tree I so often climb From the paintings of animals Hanging from my wall Im from a gnarled old oak Tall and proud But bent with age Each branch representing One soul, one life When this tree dies My family withers away. Hudson Seman Essex HIgh SchooI, Crade 10 28 Lady Addeline SackvillePankhurst SamueI Zaber CraItsbury SchooI, Crade 12 What a queer old woman she was. More bird than human and more birds skeleton than bird. She hopped along the busy sidewalk exactly like a songbird, her head bobbing along and with no more than one foot on the sidewalk at a time. On her head, a wilting daisy pushed into the ribbon of a shapeless violet felted hat, wobbled this way and that, always in opposition of the direction of her head so that it looked like an antenna feeling the space before her. Her jacket, hanging loosely over her crooked frame, was of the same felt as her hat and was belted by a thick piece of some reptiles skin. In one claw hand, she clutched a long tartan umbrella that she used half the time as a cane and the other half as an extension of her arm, prodding interesting things (a dropped handbag, a newspaper, a probably dead homeless man). The other hand swung freely, like the gentle arm movements of a contented baby. This hand was decorated with an immense ring, an amethyst set into wreaths of gold, a gargantuan ring that must have weighed more than she did. As a bus packed with cooing tourists drove past her, her jacket was lifted by the gust of wind revealing a skirt with little cornflowers growing on a field of blue. The skirt was too short for her, perhaps she had worn it in childhood, for the hem fell two inches above her knees. From the hem descended a pair of black stockings that clung to her scrawny calves and shins in lumps and bulges. On her feet was a pair of delicate heeled boots with little silver eyelets that shone against the black leather; they looked like theyd been fashioned during Edwards reign. A queer old bird, poking and prodding her way along the sidewalk with her flapping, purple overcoat and wobbling heels. 29 Raindrops Nora HIII Vermont Commons SchooI, Crade 8 Welcome to a world where just being you is never enough the real world, young and innocent, we are told to be ourselves, to be bold but as we grow we learn the truth that we are born to be molds, the perfect soldiers a fake smile here a fake laugh there, just want to scream loud and clear but thats just a dream an improbability because I dont scream not any more I cant even whisper like the wind how can I ever roar like the lion? Alone, shattered, misunderstood and misjudged the doll stands herself up a spider web of cracks on her face creak as they blow dust off to face the sun because sometimes we have to rescue ourselves sometimes we have to be our own prince charmings. The doll smiles, she never had cared for fairy tales too predictable in an unpredictable world they weave a false sense of security the doll with a spider web face turns to them and roars loud, pure, raw a beautiful distaste a glitch like raindrops falling up because sometimes, we do things that defy gravity. OIIvIa FontaIne Essex High School, Grade 10 30 One Wild Night Samantha Caruso MIII RIver UnIon HIgh SchooI, Crade 12 Clink. Clink. Four quarters are deposited on a table. Clack. Clack. An insignificant waitress moves across the tile floor in a tired, over-used pattern to gather her tips. She is nameless because this night is not her night. This story is not her story. She is part of the scenery much like the inconsequential noises of her shoes. Hiss. Hiss. A bottle of cleaning solution, mostly water, emits a thin stream to drive away spilled salt and ketchup stains, or at least make them less noticeable. The sounds combine with the soft murmur of late night small talk and tiny collisions of fork on plate. All at once, there is a shift. Something has changed. A car pulls into the parking lot but its different. The car isnt moving slowly. It resonates with the energy of a young, exuberant driver. Every move it makes is definitive; pulling into a spot, parking, the sudden shutting off of headlights, the door opening and closing after a young female driver gets out. This is the part that matters. Life fills the lungs of the girl with each breath, and youthful vibrancy puts such a spring in her step that the ground seems to be walking with her. Its throwing and catching her like a gymnast on a trampoline. She wont be alone. Shell bring others. They always do. One voice becomes many as they stumble in. Each one is drunk with fun and giddiness. There is a dying gasp of the serenity that once ruled before it is consumed by the noise. Teenagers. The waitress guides them to a booth. She knows thisll be the last time shell have control over them tonight. Menus are handed over and eyes turn to address them. French fries, milk shakes, sandwiches and salads. What are they craving? Sweet? Sour? Salty? Savory? Spicy? They planned and laughed and counted and laughed and spewed filth their parents wouldnt approve of. They talked about booze. They talked about music. They talked about drugs. They talked about movies. They talked about sex. They talked about partying. They talked about what classes were and werent good that day. Because it was raw. Because it was real. Because they could. Annoyance swelled against them like a tangible force. Old men glared. Couples whispered. Some even pointed. Their laughter took on an undertone of strength. Theyre no longer individuals. Theyre a gang. They defiantly go eye to eye with whoever gets in their faces. They express displeasure in mocking, condescending tones. They practically beg the old man to complain to management. Throw us out! Well go somewhere else. Call me a name! Ill think of a worse one for you. Judge me! Scorn me! Look down on me! I have three friends here tonight who think youre full of it! Theyre wearing rose-colored glasses and the world has taken on a happy, pink hue. Leaving. Laughing. Piling into cars. Music blaring. Waitress sweeping, finally collecting her tips. 31 fastmoving Anna Rutenbeck ChampIaIn VaIIey UnIon HIgh SchooI, Crade 11 You were probably too fastmoving for windows positioned in a corner locking you out locking you in.
Trees never looked so green as that day when your infantile hands reached up and over the bars of your crib (you always had a taste for freedom). You wanted to be fastmoving like the light like the sun like the stars. Understanding never came so easy to you as that day when the sun fell out of the sky. The world fell apart every plant turned black but tears never graced your grey-blue-storm eyes, worry never crossed your infantile mind.
A crisis they insisted.
A tragedy they screamed.
as the world fell dark and fluorescents lit alleyways churches mountain tops and you always told us that we were never close enough to the sky the moon the stars. Your observation skills had always surpassed those of the fire hydrants.
You would yell at me yell at us for being comical in times of heartbreak and that sun falling from that sky you yelled that was heartbreak on a massive scale. You warned us about the oceans, you warned us about the forests. We would have to pour oil into the oceans, spread napalm on the forests (light them on fire) just so we might have light for a week a day an hour. Because, honey, we are human.
Its not that we need to destroy; its that we need to create destruction. This is destruction by fire; this is trees falling away, oxygen becoming as rare as petrol.
This is a world-wide water shortage and no-more blue jeans. I try to explain this to you and your infantile mind your infantile hands still reaching for some light still reaching for some understanding and, honey, if you find it lend me some. 32 Education ChrIstopher Prado CoIchester HIgh SchooI, Crade 9 I would like the federal government to make education the focus of national attention and investment. Top economists, journalists and educators insist that education is our means to a more productive and technologically advanced economy and society. A better-educated society will yield a better-educated workforce, capable of innovation and leadership in new industries. What we know to be true about the relationship between academic rigor in education and economic recovery and growth, is confirmed by the OECDs (Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development) recently released PISA (Program for International Student Assessment) results. This is an assessment of knowledge and skills of high school students around the world. Academically, American high school students lag behind their counterparts in Shanghai, China, Hong Kong, Singapore, South Korea and Finland. In fact, our nations students were 17th in reading, 29th in math, and 23rd in science, far from a standard of excellence. Our comparative academic disadvantage should be a wake-up call to Congress and to our nation because this academic lag will affect our economic strength as a nation. Education, knowledge and intellectual capital are necessary components of both short- and long-term economic recovery, and for economic development and leadership at home and abroad. The well-respected economist and Nobel laureate Joseph Stiglitz emphasized this when he described South Koreas transition to a modern economy, and to a dynamic learning society. Before, it was a shortage of capital that was thought to hinder economiesbut it is in fact the shortage of knowledge that matters. It is this shortage that must be addressed by the federal government. One solution has been outlined by Harvard-based education expert Tony Wagner, who explained the three key skills students need to thrive in a knowledge economy: critical thinking and problem solving, the ability to communicate effectively, and the ability to collaborate. It turns out that the countries whose students scored well in these skills have something else in common: they invest heavily to recruit, train and support their teachers, in order to attract and retain the best. In addition, as author and New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman wrote recently, parents must turn off the TV and video games, check that homework is finished, encourage reading, and elevate learning as the most important life skill. Robert Samuelson of The Washington Post echoes this view, reminding parents to play a key role in their childrens academic success. The more we demand from teachers, the more we have to demand from students and parents. We must also reward academic excellence as demonstrated by individuals and schools. 33 If we do all of these things, we can serve as leaders in future economic growth areas, including renewable energy, energy efficient products, clean power systems and emissions-free transportation. An educated youth is a formidable force in our country, especially in times where innovation and invention are so important for development, progress and prosperity. Our nations leaders must collaborate to reevaluate the priorities of the nation. More attention and investment must be put toward the education of our children the future of this country. Whether you are on one side of the aisle or the other, whether you are from Alaska, New Mexico, Ohio or Vermont, Americans all agree that knowledge is a public good, and we must all be invested in its pursuit. TayIor Long Essex HIgh SchooI, Crade 10 34 Saran Wrap LIza Duchesneau MIIton HIgh SchooI, Crade 12 I am Saran Wrap I wrinkle and contort and frustrate I stick to whatever is nearby And when there is nothing I stick to myself. I suffocate I wrap myself around the fresh necks The surrendered leftovers They cant escape me Dewy moisture dangles from my insides The perspiration, condensation, sensation of longing My preserves condensing under the tightly stretched plastic They can see right through me A lucid vision through one dimension The simplicity of my purpose Underestimated. I sit in the drawer I am a shadow A roll of predictability For the first sheet matches the second Matches the third My matter is identical My identity doesnt matter. I coil around a hollow tube Shriveling Constricting Suffocation to the rhythm of temperature As warm fingers rip me from my dimness Dragging me along jagged teeth Until I break Tear Hoping I will fit their needs Pulling me tighter and tighter Stretching me until suffocation is the only power I possess all my own They can see right through me. I am fake. I am plastic. They ball me up They throw me in the trash They use me until Im useless Until my insides are rotten. I am Saran Wrap. Sunburn Rebecca VaIIey 8eIIows Free Academy, Crade 11 My sunburn skin is peeling alone and I thought youd be here to pick me fresh in the mid-afternoon but the bed is unmade again and our wine glasses, flutes and stems that soaked in and made patterns on the carpet blood puddles like when you nursed me back to health in a Saudi compound in 1991 kissed my bile clean as dirty love (or was that just on the television? but arent we every late night black/ white film?) Im no innocent could be convicted by a jury for treason except Ive sworn only on the abdomen rib jutted specimen of men, and their skin never peels away at the center rings of dead white flesh dead white wine bottles, and red for the multitude of tongue flavors and I thought youd be here for the aftertaste but it is all a matter of personal preference why pick me fresh skin when I can certainly do it myself. Heartbreak is more exfoliation than anything less concrete. 35 City Cirls SIerra MakarIs Mount MansIIeId UnIon HIgh SchooI, Crade 12 Stories are just that, stories, flights to pace and prowl; the skeletons of rusted paradigms: into these we build our lives. Do you remember the stories from your childhood do you - ever let those musty books take purchase in your mind? Do you ever let those figures reassemble: the bones of creation, the archetypes of nascence, to be filled in by the flesh and faces of real time? That woman on the corner could be Rapunzel, skinny and cigaretted her walk-up patio perched high against a low-down world; if I wanted to see her Id take the stairs because her hairs too short and smoke- stained to ever really shine. Or Snow White for the modern age Eastern chambermaid, mildly bred emptying the wastebasket every morning on the corner of Seventh and Main. Rapunzel smokes, oblivious to the congress of colliding tales just below her window, every morning. Snow White stands under five feet and shes got thin Asian lips and a home-stitched face not anonymous enough for comfort, and no one will exalt her in a transparent coffin when she pops off. Snow thinks the subway is a luxury: for all its jerks and belches there she can rest her bound and weary feet. Sharing her low-slung plastic bench is the girl in yesterdays makeup and last weeks clothes. Frosted hair wont come back into fashion in greater Manhattan, but her crowd appreciates it; theyre the ones flicking cigarette ash into drainpipes and fending off the down-lows in their potbellies and leather jackets who crave more tricks than they can pay for. Where is she going, dressed like that is there an appointment in the world worth requiring such an abusive shade of red? Id like them all to meet, someday in that pub above the Laundromat. Rapunzel with her bored lips, Snow White with her deference, Sleeping Beauty with her pierced-heart narcolepsy. Each asleep in one way or another; each missing a piece potent enough to wake up her corner of the world. 36 Close Your Eyes 8rIdget verson Mount MansIIeId UnIon HIgh SchooI, Crade 12 Close your eyes. Close your eyes. Watch those patterns that only you can see projected just above the screen of eyelids, shapes and streaks in purple, yellow, white. Watch them play out and watch them fade. This is a dark you visit every night, the dark that stays with you, clings to you, and shreds itself into milliseconds every time you blink or think of stars think of stars think of fires by the side of the fields by the side of the road where the glass glitters where the glass shatters where the glass reflects. You drew patterns on your arms with charcoal that you crushed with your fingers, still warm. You painted your lips with it, licked it from your hand, and left streaks of black on the skin of anyone you touched and even through the flicker of light on smoke you could still see constellations. Sometimes you can stare at nothing much and see those shapes, see a two-second clip of some memory distorted by recognition into something you can still understand. Sometimes you try to capture that, remember it, but it turns into the next thing someone says or the song thats playing in your head or the rhythm of your own NataIIe Redmond Essex HIgh SchooI, Crade 9 37 steps across the floor. Sometimes you dont care. Sometimes you tug at your earlobes, or chew your lips, or hook two fingers round your lower jaw and pull just to see if it comes off and you end up biting your own hands in self-defense. Sometimes you stare at yourself in the mirror for minutes, trying to equate your view with those eyes, those eyes, those eyes that move. Sometimes you lie still and count your breaths and wonder which one of you is real, the one thats doing the counting or the one thats doing the breathing. Heres a hint: you lose count but you dont die. When you think about sleep it doesnt come. You almost like the hallucinations that arrive with 3 a.m. You cant keep your balance and you dont know if the floor is real, and if you fall you barely notice because it doesnt make a sound. You think you can hear music or someone calling your name but its just the hum of the refrigerator or the water heater switching on. Once you helped a friend look for an earring but you found her whole life instead, and when you turned around to give it to her, she was gone. You never read horoscopes in the newspaper, but you read the obituaries sometimes and their predictions are always right. You pretend the columns of text are trees, and the pictures are Technicolor canopies, and the occasional little headlines are birds just lighting there for a moment before they fly away and turn back into the Dow Jones Industrial Average. The ink smudges your fingers. Like charcoal. You wonder sometimes about the patterns blood makes on bones because youre used to just skin, or skin that heals. And youre not all there. Youre not all there, youre transparent, youre fading, youre not all here, you dont remember the last time you were anchored to Earth, pressed down to the floor with the force of gravity, something you could feel on the soles of your feet and the top of your head and the slope of your shoulders rounding down to hands loosely grasping something real. This is real. Remember this, this is real. Close your eyes. Now wake up. 38 ln My Mother's Womb Tya ]ohnson Essex HIgh SchooI, Crade 10 It feels like I have been a part of this world for longer than my life, like I was born into these twisted words and thoughtful imaginings, thinking up the story of my life before it even began. My mother assures me that I kicked in the womb like any normal baby, but I wonder if I was really kicking and not throwing notebooks of unfinished pieces in complete frustration at their failure to get across my feelings and emotions. I wanted out of that balled up space, into the open air of the world where I could breathe and contemplate my thoughts, your thoughts, their thoughts, the actions of that man who knocked over my mother in his desperation to get away from the store where he had just stolen a coat for his little daughter. I wonder if I know her, have ever seen her before, bumped into her in the never-ending hallways of high school? I remember kindergarten and preschool where the teachers rules meant nothing, nothing to me, and I broke them over and over and over, all the while moving ahead of my friends and classmates, reading full sentences and chapters of old English way before they could, and then, later, writing sonnets and love poems before they could even begin to fathom the depths of high school love. Ive been called normal by some, but what is normal, and do I really fit that category? How many of you were writing on the inside of your mothers womb and leaving messages for the little siblings you knew would follow after? And while my peers spend their time trying to understand each other, I am trying to understand the world. I mean seriously, why are teachers paid so little and treated like nobodies? Because you must notice that the somebodies would be nobodies, too, if it werent for them. And what about this racial prejudice and hate of anyone whos different? Dont tell me that it doesnt exist anymore, look around you. Terrorist jokes? Gay intolerance? Political assassination? People have views, and they show them, but is the way they do it really necessary? People call me insane because I question society, but I have a word for you and your non-respectful, hating, prejudiced language: acceptance. Acceptance. I dont understand why or how or when, but I know that all this time I have been putting thoughts on paper and fighting for what I believe. I think my mother was wrong; I was not kicking in her womb; I was busy writing and hurling unfinished notebooks in pure frustration at the chaos of words on paper and the failure to portray this strange world. 39 Lukas Armstrong Essex HIgh SchooI, Crade 9 40 Sara LIIy StadIer RIchmond MIddIe SchooI, Crade 7 Her name is Sara she is 15 years old five foot six and seventy-five pounds, she thinks she could stand to lose a few. When I hug her I dont know if I should feel her ribs against mine. I dont know if I can take her hand without breaking it. Or if her hair should be that thin. Or her eyes so sunken. And when I see her When I really see her Shes beautiful Her bodys beautiful, but its not really a body at all A body is muscle and flesh and love and memories. A body has marks to remind you that life isnt perfect. A body has curves In all the places That were not meant to be straight. But her body Is not a body at all, Its all skin and bone With nothing left And nothing to hold her. Shes delicate And vulnerable. Her body is full of pain and hurt, and sadness. Her body doesnt really resemble a body. And I want to help her And I want to listen But there are fingers in her mouth Where there should be words. And she needs to listen She needs to understand Shes beautiful But she needs to go back, she needs to learn what a body really is. 41 Amate Paintings HartIord MemorIaI MIddIe SchooI, Crade 8 AIexandrea Cooper Hannah Mahon Amanda DombroskI Mary Kate LangIIIe 42 Starcrossed CassIe 8esso Mount MansIIeId UnIon HIgh SchooI, Crade 11 Fools. Uncross your eyes and the stars will align. There are no star-crossed lovers; only cross-eyed stargazers. l Talk Softly MImI TempIeton Sherburne EIementary SchooI, Crade 6 I talk softly For fear the wind will hear me and carry on my voice whispering to the trees The birds listen in flying my words to the mountains dropping them setting them free They float softly down nestling in the snow staying there forever So I talk softly DaIIIn CarIety Essex HIgh SchooI, Crade 11 43 Prickle Crass and Shortcake Child MIa Eaton U32 HIgh SchooI, Crade 10 There was a time when my place was at the foot of the driveway sitting tight against the mailbox post. Prickle grass ate through my sundresses the ones mother had so carefully sewn until the small patches of my knee caps had stained bright green. Naked toes wiggled together intertwining themselves with soft dandelion stems. Soft palms filled with blueberries refused to feed the cat as it cried and rubbed against my legs. I ate shortcake in the afternoon sun the tinfoil casing folded back pink juice trickling into my lap. Sticky and smiling I ambled back home when it got dark but could not bring myself inside the house. Just steps from the door I lay on my back as an entire world of endless stars danced just for me. A growly stomach turned into sleep and those stained palms became imprinted with the prickle grass. Watch Your Feet CeorgIa Parke Stowe HIgh SchooI, Crade 11 Perhaps it was the clams who stole the burdensome pearl from the longer green oyster who couldnt hold a note underwater if its place in the sand depended on it. Perhaps it was the solemn starfish who choked on seaweed when the old man threw it head first back into the reef. Perhaps it was the foreign snorkeler who, lovesick seasick adventuresome pride, started to drown when she lost sight of the sky and was saved by the underwater mountain that drew blood from her toes. Perhaps it was those bittersweet lullabies that taught children to fear the depths of the sea. Fear the tide! Fear the figures pushing you away from the walls and into the middle of the carpet the middle of the room the middle of the ocean where you can swim on your own with nothing to assist you but the muscles in your legs you grew from running back and forth away from the rising tides. 44 Sam RobInson Essex HIgh SchooI, Crade 10 45 The lnternational Sign for Happiness is a C Maor Chord Ruby McCaIIerty 8urIIngton HIgh SchooI, Crade 10 Seldom can I find the words to express my true intentions, and I often let phrases slip from my lips like little bullets to shoot the conversation dead. Ill watch the subject matter fall to the ground, and in one last attempt to resuscitate it, I will apologize for my inability to be a social butterfly. In doing so, I lodge another bullet deep into the heart of the matter. I make a promise to myself to be silent, observant and to keep any ideas contained. This is a vow I keep for all of three minutes until the topic changes again, and I find myself bursting to add my voice. My lips once again become the smoking gun, and I, the shell-shocked girl whose finger slipped on the trigger. If it were up to me, I would speak in phrases solely musical. Throbbing chords and drawn-out bass notes and flighty arpeggios that pull bystanders in and drag them under, all expressing my intentions perfectly. Excitement would be expressed by a trilling flute rather than high-pitched chatter, and my melancholy complaints would be written in the air by low, slow cello strokes as opposed to choked, whining phrases. No fumbled bullets here, just truth, and everyone would always understand because the international sign for happiness is a C Major chord. Sadly, I was given vocal cords instead of a symphony, predetermined notes that always seem to fail me when I need them most. Instead of a graceful melody, the only noise I can make is dissonance, a sound remarkably similar to the shot of a gun. Matt O`8rIen Essex HIgh SchooI, Crade 12 46 For You, For Me 8ethany Connor Founders MemorIaI SchooI, Crade 5 They say when you die all your lost loved ones come to greet you. But do they mean the people you love, or the people who love you? Because here I am, lying on this floor, scribbling out this one last message to you, and I hope its not a mistake. Dont be afraid by my words; actually, I hope youre comforted. When its time for you to leave this world, and you fly through that tunnel, or whatever youll do to move on, and all your lost loved ones come to greet you, Ill be there. I hope Ill have to wait a long time. You deserve to live longer than I do. There really wont be a five years from now for me, no, Remember that boy you thought you loved? and we all laugh. I wont get that. My mom doesnt want to believe it, but I know this is the truth. At least this way I can say for sure: I love you. That wont change. I know youre in love with another girl, one who doesnt know you, and I hope one day youll get the guts to ask her out. Dont ever feel guilty for loving someone because of this letter. For me. I have songs I downloaded onto my personal iTunes playlist, songs I wrote. Albums, songs, lies, diary entries, songs I sang when I couldnt admit aloud the truth. Listen to them please, listen hard to the album For You. Because those songs are exactly that. For you. I want to let you know I love you, even if you dont love me. I dont regret one word I said to you and dont feel guilty about some words you said, or didnt say, to or about me. For me. If one day you come to join me wherever Ill go, I hope Ill be able to greet you. And if I cant because you never loved me, Ill find a way around it. Somehow, someday, that day, Ill be waiting for you. 47 AIexa DaIIy Essex HIgh SchooI, Crade 12 48 You Are What You Eat HartIord MIddIe SchooI, Crade 7 Art Saengem KayIa Lancor TyIer Avery Myrandah French 49 Mother of the Night EIIza CIIes ChampIaIn VaIIey UnIon HIgh SchooI, Crade 9 As the night quietly listens With her ears in the wind, And her eyes in the moon, She watches over her children In their darkest hour. Protected and out of harms way, She moves with the nocturnal. With the stars as her earrings, And the leaves in her hair, She waits for the sunrise And dances with the daylight When together they turn the world gold. Swirls Red and rown SamueI Perry Crossett 8rook MIddIe SchooI, Crade 7 Autumn comes and the light and dark are equal for one day; darkness comes, shortening time for play. The leaves fall to the ground in swirls of red and brown, and the fruitful harvest is ready to be picked. Chopping rings in the air as wood is split, and animals hide from the cold. The fire warms through the grate in the floor, and a knife cuts eyes in a pumpkin. The land sheds the last of its flowers, and the cold wind comes, kissing peoples unprotected faces. Two Threads ChrIssy SmIth Woodstock UnIon HIgh SchooI, Crade 10 My breath was almost stolen once. I failed to quite see a luminous glow in the distance. The walls began to crumble and sink; They drew together like large, cruel lips Cracked with decisions of past generations. I wondered what savior was watching, if any. I cursed myself too, for breathing too much life Into my creations of evil. In a moment of light, however, I realized I was not alone. A force brought me to the surface Bruised, lacerated, most likely internally bleeding But alive. Weak, and alive. And that was the day that I promised My life would be dedicated to this force, An immensely powerful spirit who lifts me. Up beyond the clouds, beyond grief and happiness Beyond any obstacle life could throw at me That was the day we determined the rest of our lives. Ive never been so sure of anything. Two threads intertwine, meet, separate and continue into the horizon Indefinitely. 50 lt Didn't Rain Today CoIIeen KnowIes Proctor ]unIorSenIor HIgh SchooI, Crade 11 It didnt rain today.
We all thought it would. The whole village stood in the square, between all the houses, waiting for the sky to break. The clouds were black there, swooping like vultures and eagles, but giving us nothing except empty hope.
One drop. One drop fell from the sky. We all watched it sail down slowly (it wasnt actually slow, but it felt like an eternity) until it exploded on the cracked ground, the dry ground.
We waited all day for it. We waited all night for it. We waited all...
My mother started crying. She grabbed my sisters tiny, tiny hand, and walked back to the little house, the little wooden house where I grew up.
My fathers face grew red, red as the blade of his knife when he killed that rabbit, all those months ago. Red as the blanket we used to cover its corpse, cover it until we were ready to cook it. Red as the herb my mother grabbed from the earth at the edge of the woods while we ran into the forest to stew the rabbit secretly. Red as my mothers eyes as we ate it, (ashamed) (quietly) (quickly) so no one in the town would know that we had this precious gift.
That one drop. That single drop had made my fathers face red again had made my mother cry again but this time with rage and fear instead of shame.
The people walked away slowly, whispering and muttering.
It didnt rain today.
And then I stood alone. Me and the small patch of ground that the one drop had hit. The earth had soaked it up before we could even blink. Maybe it was an illusion?
No. The sky still churned.
My fathers boots had left marks in the dry, cracked, forsaken ground, leaving a path through the parched village into the forest of shame.
I touched my forehead to the ground and sent up a quick whispered prayer to the gods. I prayed for my father. I prayed for the rain. 51 Poetry MaggIe SuIIIvan MIIton HIgh SchooI, Crade 12 I found it in stray shoeboxes left on the floor until someone stepped on them, breaking the cardboard shells. Written words and smiley faces with extra dots that turn into accidental noses, awkward alien smiley faces written down on paper next to the words. These are the things I kept in those boxes, along with the names of the days that were either good or bad. Names of the people who are either good or bad. I found it stuck on the bottom of my old rubber shoes, squished like gum into the flattened crevices of my path. My whole journey documented, my whole story written. I found the anger in my fists when I raised them up high. A protest, a non-hate face. I found the terror. I found wiped-away goodbyes, too-long-to-remember hellos, and I found forgotten eyes. I found sorrow. I found how just a few words, just a few sentences, just a few names with those stupid labels, those stupid Goods or Bads can mean everything in a simple moment. I found it; I found life in those stray shoeboxes left on the floor until I let myself step on them. I am angry at my fingers for exposing the words that I always hid in the back of my throat. I wish theyd float-float away.
Im angry at my mind for always running and my soul for jumping out in a butterfly sort of heartbeat, suddenly out of my chest without even an emergency surgery. Suddenly everything is out, my cardboard shell shattered. I found these things when I started to write. These images and these emotions come alive. I found it in these places. I found poetry, and it is alive. 52 Looking Through the Eyes of Asperger Syndrome CIark Hamm 8rattIeboro Area MIddIe SchooI, Crade 7 Some people are special. Sometimes in a good way, sometimes in a bad way. Me? Well, Im both. Being smart and somewhat neurotic is confusing. What I mean is that the way I act is weird to people while, to me, Im just doing my regular thing. The reason I act weird is because I have a disorder. Some people have Down Syndrome, some people have ADD, some have ADHD and some people (like me) have Asperger Syndrome. For those who dont know what that means, let me explain it this way; I have a very high intelligence, but Im socially challenged. From my point of view, its like being in a mosh pit: no communication and everything all scrambled together. It has affected me since I was in kindergarten. I didnt have a lot of friends. I didnt have a lot of friends because I acted different from the other kids and to them I was not normal. I was the weird kid who was too sensitive and always was picked on for being different. When I was 10, my mother signed me up for a therapist. She worked with me on my talking abilities and making friends. That helped, but very little. I have since gotten better, but there was something missing, something important. That thing was a friend who I could relate to, a friend who had gone though more hardships than I could have gone through in a lifetime. At the beginning of the school year, I found that person. When I first met her, she helped me so much. In the past months up until now, we have become the best of friends and started our own band. So, in conclusion, just know that even when everything seems dim or all hope is lost, theres always a light, even the tiniest light, in this big, dark void of a world. This I believe. 53 Realization of Friendship 8ecca RusseII Crossett 8rook MIddIe SchooI, Crade 7 Friendship is the drift of the wind caressing your face. Its the sun when there is rain. Friendship is that fun thing to do when there is nothing else. It, or rather, your friends are your armor when you do not know how to defend yourself. They are your blade to stab back at the sight of your blood or tears. Friends know how you feel and they feel how you do. And they know you are there for them, as they are there for you. Wandering LIam Lustberg The RenaIssance SchooI, Crade 5 The face of flame Basking in all its deadly beauty Tongues of smoke lick at the grass Reaching slowly up to go higher and higher Fingers of fiery steam envelop the trees and whisper words unknown A swirling red vortex engulfs the forest, the world at its fingertips On silent wings, it floats eerily above the ground Like a bird gently taking flight. DestIny 8uIIard Essex HIgh SchooI, Crade 12 54 Apple Tree (Acrostic) zzIey Woodward Enosburg FaIIs HIgh SchooI, Crade 12 It was a Warm summer day. Not those days that Are unbearably hot, but 5imply a lovely temperature. I had Gotten a frozen smoothie, Orange flavored. I was sitting against a tree trunk, Not having a care in the world. I heard a Gong ring in The distance, and Of course it made Me think of you. Already I missed you, and I Knew you would be back in two weeks, but Even one day without you was Too long. I Hadnt written you any letters yet, and I was terribly 5orry. I wished I could 5ay that everything was fine, and that All was well, but that would have been a lie, and You know I could never Lie to you. Out of all the days you could have been gone, that was the Very worst. Even the cats missed You. Yes, the weather Outside was perfect, and I seemed fine, but Underneath I was falling apart, just Because what was the Use of a beautiful day That you werent there To appreciate with me? How could I enjoy sitting under this Apple Tree alone? I heard the 5wallows 5inging. I climbed the tree and settled On a branch, sprawled Up there with the leaves and sap, at home in Nature. I liked it up there, completely hidden from the Outside world. I could pretend I was Really Harriet the Spy. Do you remember how I used to love that book so much? Growing up, I carried a Notebook with me everywhere so I could be just like her. I Almost wrote Secret Journal on the front, but that was so unoriginal. I wrote I Love you on it instead. 55 Like Father, Like Me Lauren Dundas ChrIst the KIng SchooI, Crade 8 Sometimes Im not sure if you know me. My face is just yours, reversed with a mix of feminine features and my mothers boldness. Could you recognize me through my thoughts, the things that set me apart from the other faceless beings? You are stuck in the parallel dimension that takes you from me, me from you. Your phone has grown onto you from constant familiarity of being closer to you than I am allowed. Like vines, it has weaved its way into you, covering all of your words. Your attention span is flakey towards me, always moth-wing fragile when it flutters towards me. I find myself lost between myself and the glass wall you set carefully between us, making sure not to cast fingerprints upon it. I could sing to you the button songs you play when Im around, as if too much conversation with your child scares you. Do I scare you? Have you ever recognized the way my seaglass eyes turn a pale green when the sun hits in on a slant? Would you be able to list my insecurities, my doubts, my loves? Would you be able to name anything about me, anything that makes me specific? Because I know that your eyes are hazel, with little flecks of sadness in them. You stress too much about work, about money, about the life you want to provide for us, but when do you ever get to live that life? I know the things that make you weak, the things that make you strong. I am you, and you are me. You hide your secrets deep inside your drawers, under your socks and ties. I find myself down there, hiding with them, sharing the stories we never knew about you. I am your daughter, and you are my father. We are the best of strangers. SamueI Swanke Essex HIgh SchooI, Crade 11 56 Sestina of a roken Heart Addy CampbeII Mt. Abraham UnIon HIgh SchooI, Crade 9 Rain pours on a humid summer day. Young people too young to be old friends sit on the porch of the old house, drooping in the middle from endless treading feet From their slackened lips hang the burning embers of a lit cigarette. They are so young. But one would never know.
One wonders about those heads of theirs how much do they know? They sit quietly, talking and listening to the rain: just another ordinary day. Its still light; the night is young yet they sit there on that porch the stub of his drenched cigarette flopped beside someones bare feet.
Blankets, those countless feet of plaid, cover the couple. From the way they cuddle one will know These two have been together forever. Long enough to know the others favorite kind of cigarette, at least. What a dreary day, for those tired souls outside. But there, on that porch they are content, forever young.
A drenched robin pecks at the muddy lawn, searching for a worm for her three young and joining her in the wet are a few brave pairs of feet dangling off the edge of the old porch. One begins to know this is their favorite kind of day: this lazy summer evening in the company of friends and a good cigarette.
They talk about their problems: why he first picked up a cigarette, and why they do what they do so young, so early, what brought them to this place today. But the thing is they dont want to change. They love themselves from their heads to their feet. They love their minds; all the things they do and dont know. And theyre thankful for companions and over their heads, the roof of the porch.
He thinks about life, and how much he wants a hot cup of tea, as he watches the couple and feels the worn grain of the porch, the edges indented, whittled with pocket- knives and burned from the tip of a harsh cigarette. Why are we here? he wants to know, and how can I feel so old, when the math makes me so young? He examines the stains and calluses of his summer feet as the minutes drip by, and collect into the puddle of another well-spent day.
He remembers the previous day, spent on another porch, when his bare feet overlapped hers, and from his lips hung no cigarette. He was too young, she had said. Thats what hurt the most to know. 57 Warning Signs MeIIta Schmeckpeper U32 HIgh SchooI, Crade 11 Early Sunday morning, hushed by the air-conditioned chill of her grandfathers flower shop, she, no longer a child, but still so young she has never been kissed, watches rare blue roses fan open their fingers like ultraviolet ghosts.
Amid their more conventional cousins (Christs Blood red, Virgin white) they are surreal, and it would be easy to believe what her grandmother told her: Its unnatural. Dishonest knives and tainted tinted water made them like this.
The shop is still, its ceiling heavy and muffling. A sterile draft from the fans wafts through her, muting her thoughts, brushing over them with pale fingers until they are almost as smooth and safe as the beads of a rosary. Yet there are still half-heard sounds: children outside playing in the warming spring morning, her grandmother calling Hurry or well be late for Mass! and a wordless voice humming in the back of her head, the notes cradling impossible images the glowing lady saints and martyrs in the cathedral slip free from their stained glass frames, smiling, hands offering roses as blue as secret, as blue as boundless summer sky. Kathryn Loucks ChampIaIn VaIIey UnIon HIgh SchooI, Crade 10 58 l Could Feel 8aIIy CrawIord MIIton HIgh SchooI, Crade 12 You know how there is an infinite amount of numbers that stretch on forever, and then, in between one and two there is another infinite amount of numbers again?
Well, driving down that water-logged street I could feel all of them along with every pothole between you and me. I could feel the moonlight making my skin blue, as if it stole the air from my lungs making room for everything that could have been done, stored away with no chance to ever become.
Above a flooded beach that only asked us to leave when the sun went behind the mountains that werent green. They arent green, theyre blue. And when the sky is, too, you wonder where theyve gone. We lay down to watch them, so its the only place I feel I belong because I will always feel out of place above my feet, In a mirror-based insanity. I will always feel the tickle in my throat that makes me choke on my hereditary vanity. And I will always hate why I hate myself.
And enjoy my ability to decipher the tragedies that are real. Because I could feel because I could feel the impact of the car. I could feel the recoil of the gun that would end the excuse for the war. And as my feet tried to run from what death was, my ignorance was already done digesting his worth because they were both traveling in circles. The boy was speeding and the man was hiding. And whether they were leaving or they were just arriving means little to moonshades of blue.
And thats why I might as well keep driving towards you. Even though I could feel the timeline I could feel the future piling promise at my feet. Telling me to go find people to meet, go get accomplished so I can feel complete. Im here to live on a tempo but forget Im being timed. Im here to make my own path as I follow the lines, And somehow get back after Ive left it all behind.
Ill take these last few years of clarity before the faulty finish lines of the rebound rat races get to me. Ill look only at the eyes of those who let loving come easy and sing only to the ears that will hear and believe me and live only with the fear of fears so big theyll scare me into giving up my ability to see.
Yes I could feel our counter attack against the reasons I wouldnt come back reinforced with ignorance. I could feel the strength I lack, and every goddamned pothole on that street. I could feel you move to the backseat of a future, with an awful truth coming out on repeat up theres too crowded for me. 59 ObsessiveCompulsive ChIara Evans CoIchester HIgh SchooI, Crade 10 Rows of books Kept perfect, clean, and alphabetical Spines erect at a 90-degree angle Thats not the worst here All is aligned Dust cannot exist Everything has no pair: it has to be odd Just like me Bed is made and I get it washed every other day The mirrors are covered but I cant say why The dresser is ridiculously ordered (Im told) Colors each with their own Labels are on every drawer My room is square, nine-by-nine When I wash my hands I get a new bar of soap each time If I dont open the door three times before I leave The world will end, even if you dont believe Its the same to close that door Pictures are straight, frames never hang crooked Pictures themselves must be black and white The cacophony of colors in the real world is too bright I wear only one color a day, mostly black Speaking of wardrobe, all is uniform Just different colors When I go outside I carry Purell in hand To wash away any germs I step on no cracks, no leaves, or twigs I cannot go out in the rain I am obsessive-compulsive for now My world is organized, color-coded, straight Odd, predictable, and square in space I wasnt always this way Chaos would reign I got wet in the rain, stepped on cracks And I opened doors without closing them After you left, the world went in its place I have my little space But Somehow even if I open and close a door three times Or wash with new soap each occasion The covered mirror can only hide me from myself Truly, if I must be honest here, When you moved on and left forever I became obsessive-compulsive in my fear I just cant let the world disappear Not from you Night Dancers CabrIeIIe 8erthIaume MaIIets 8ay SchooI, Crade 3 Swooping, diving, flying. Who who, Who who. They begin their ballet. Silent they are as they prowl Through the night. But at the first crack of dawn, All do say goodbye To the graceful night dancers. 60 Kid ]uIIa HancockSong Pacem LearnIng CommunIty, Crade 9 Editors note: This is fiction. Sit down. Youre in trouble, kid. Busted. Grounded. Toast. Maybe we pushed you forward but its you who crossed the line. Its you whos been shut up in your room all week doing God-knows-what, coming out God-knows-when but never when we were around, coming out to eat and use the bathroom but always slinking back into what you shouldnt have to think of as a refuge. A refuge from what? Your family? Look at me when I talk to you. Look. At. Me. What are you hoping, the table will have more interesting things to say? I dont know what went wrong with you, kid. You were doing fine with your classwork, your friends, your attitude, and then you just... retreated. Like a turtle into its shell. You do not have a shell, okay? Youre a human being and not a turtle, and you need to act like it because if you keep this up, Ill start feeling like its my fault. Like I didnt, we didnt, raise you properly. God knows what youre doing in your room, but you keep the door closed. When we asked, you said you were cleaning or working, but why do you have the door closed? Its like you have secrets now, kid, secrets from your family, and I hate that I dont trust you and you must not trust me and I shouldnt trust you. Thats what I hate. I hate this back-and-forthing; I hate these circles you drive me and your mother through. Look at me, okay? This shouldnt be happening. Why wont you look at me? Im your goddamn father, and Im not going to hurt you. Toast is a metaphor. What did I do wrong? Youre supposed to be growing up and youre growing down. Supposed to be becoming a responsible young adult and instead you do... nothing. You do nothing, kid, and I should have taught you to do something. You dont talk; you only eat when we make you, your only friends are your imaginary ones. Youre a broken child. God, Ive raised a broken child. A vegetable. Toast; youre already toast. I raised a robot. What did I do wrong? Talk to me. Tell me. Speak up, Im not the table and my ears are on my head and not the floor. Look at me when Im talking to you. Grow better at what you do, kid. I know you have talents because even vegetables have talents. Get a job, kid. Youre almost old enough, and you need money so when Im old you can help me out. Make money and help me out. Why wont you even look at me? Were your goddamn parents, the people who swear they want to die before you do. You dont talk to us, you dont take our advice, you dont even trust us. 61 Grow up, kid. Thats what I want. Grow up and grow out of this phase (godletitbeaphaseandnotsomethingpermanent) and grow into a job and success and happiness and money. A parent wants their child to love them. A parent wants their child to not need them anymore. Stop needing us, kid. We want you to be independent, and in some ways you are, but we wont let you leave home if you only eat when we tell you to. Grow out of this house. Study hard now and become somebody important. Dont forget us. We tried, we tried to raise an unbroken child but your eggshell is cracked as they come. But remember how hard we tried. I tried to understand you when you tried to talk to me but it, it, it didnt feel right. Grow up and make money, kid, but goddamnit, dont forget me. Dont let me become nothing to you. I was a god in your eyes, kid, and I know thats supposed to change, but not into this. This cant be right. What did I do? Dont forget me, kid. Please dont forget me. God, if you forget what Ive sacrificed for you... Look at me. Im talking to you and this is goddamn important. What happened? Youre repelling us now. Blocking us out of your life but were supposed to be in charge of it. Dont let me go. Dont let me disappear from you, goddamnit. Im not a god in your eyes anymore but at least let me be a human. Look at me, kid. Goddamnit, why wont you look at me? Look at me. Look. Goddamn. Up. Why are you crying? 62 Follow the light, follow it! Now! Syaoran I speak emotions, and sometimes words. Peaches My extremities are close to numb. LIza Inconclusiveness thrives through destitute writing assignments. FeIIx the Creat I wouldnt know (Ive never died). somebody It takes two to whisper quietly. warrIorkItten You have to break the walls. IIuIIykIttynInja I will always hold on. Always. that wrIter kIddo What is the time Mr. Wolf? Pug Darling, it pretty much never does. QwertyCIrI I wish I could tell you. Nyx That might be a bit uncomfortable. gradster1 I know where our dreams go. kcp Brick walls can be so forgiving. 8aIIyraee Lifes like glue; it tastes bad. LaughIngFacade I never wanted to go back. LunaSunset And then I saw its tail. whItehaIr You never left me any stardust. McWrIter Can I try that again, please? AIonewIthFrIends It is her life, not theirs. IntrepIdheart It was probably beautiful I forget. somebody I wish someone would answer me. cIaIrey.bearIe 6 WORDS On youngwritersproject.org there is often a little widget on the front page where young writers post their mini-stories, sometimes a sentence, sometimes a paragraph but most often six words no more, no less. We have a collection of more than 6,000 of them from the last year or so. Here are some that struck us, with the online usernames of the authors: 63 The truth is always there. Ask. Anonymous Can you see it? The world? IamtIme Let me figure it out, please. rIsDoII We counted down until six, laughing. DarkDecember When I was young, I listened. ZabIra SIIver The snow fell early that August. StIIISearchIng Play with their expectations, my child. CIrce Howd you work that one out? somebodyeIse That monkey ate my shoe. Again. TItanIa Well THAT wasnt what I expected. EIeanoRooseveItLover Just toured my future personal hell. that wrIter kIddo My white light has gone out. oIawcb Mailing herself letters written in cursive. zzIey My soul is gone. Im scared. Anonymous I die slowly when doing homework. Nacho Roosters never made sense in Spanish. gradster1 Im too tired to be reasonable. sheIbyncb 64 Student Writers and Artists Astore, Henry .................................... front cover Armstrong, |ukas ..........................................39 Avery, Ty|er.....................................................48 Berth|aume, Gabr|e||e .....................................59 Besso, Oass|e ................................................42 Bu||ard, Dest|ny ..............................................53 Bundock, Er|n ................................................11 Bushee, Oa||| ..................................................14 Oampbe||, Addy .............................................56 Oaruso, Samantha .........................................30 Ohen, Just|n ..................................................16 Oonnor, Bethany ............................................46 Oooper, A|exandrea .......................................41 Orawford, Ba||y ..............................................58 Orow|ey, Abby................................................10 Oumm|n, E||zabeth .........................................26 Da||y, A|exa ....................................................47 Dawson, Oory ................................................24 Do|kar, Ka|sang ..............................................21 Dombrosk|, Amanda ......................................41 Duchesneau, ||za ..........................................34 Dundas, |auren .............................................55 Eaton, M|a .....................................................43 Espos|to, lsabe||a ...........................................23 Evans, Oh|ara ................................................59 F|aherty, Oara||ne ...........................................19 Fonta|ne, O||v|a ..............................................29 French, Myrandah ..........................................48 Gar|ety, Da|||n .................................................42 G||bert, Oourtney ...........................................10 G||es, E||za .....................................................49 Hamm, O|ark .................................................52 Hancock-Song, Ju||a .....................................60 Hermanowsk|, Henre .....................................15 H|||, Nora ........................................................29 Ho|schuh, W|||ow ...........................................26 Hughes, Braeden .............................................9 lverson, Br|dget .............................................36 Jackson, Anne ...............................................27 Johnson, Tya .................................................38 Pa|ge Kehoe ....................................................6 Ke||y, O|a|re ....................................................17 Know|es, Oo||een ...........................................50 |ancor, Kay|a .................................................48 |ang|||e, Mary Kate ........................................41 |avo|e, Meghan ...............................................9 |em|eux, Andrew .............................................8 |ong, A|ex|a ...................................................21 |ong, Tay|or ...................................................33 |oucks, Kathryn.............................................57 |ustberg, ||am...............................................53 |ynch, M|chae| ...............................................22 Mahon, Hannah .............................................41 Makar|s, S|erra ...............................................35 McOafferty, Ruby ...........................................45 Mukherjee, Basundhara .................................22 Mum|ey-Dupu|s, A|ex .....................................13 Neme, Jackson .............................................12 O`Br|en, Matt .................................................45 O`Too|e, ||am ................................................15 Parke, Georg|a ...............................................43 Patneaude, Brendan ........................................8 Perry, Oourtney ..............................................20 Perry, Samue| ................................................49 P|nard, Just|n .................................................20 P|nta|r, O||v|a .....................................back cover Prado, Ohr|stopher ........................................32 Puma, Nata||e ..................................................4 Ray, Jam|e .....................................................27 Redmond, Nata||e ..........................................36 Rob|nson, Sam ..............................................21 Rob|nson, Sam ..............................................44 Ro|, Jason ........................................back cover Russe||, Becca ...............................................53 Russo, Emma ................................................16 Rutenbeck, Anna ...........................................31 Safford, Morgan .............................................18 Saeng-em, Art ...............................................48 Schmeckpeper, Me||ta ...................................57 Se||ars, A|yx ...................................................18 Seman, Hudson .............................................27 Sen|or, Nata||e ................................................23 Sm|th, Kat|e .....................................................7 Sm|th, Ohr|ssy ...............................................49 Sopchak, Emma ............................................25 Stad|er, |||y ....................................................40 Su|||van, Magg|e .............................................51 Swanke, Samue| ............................................55 Temp|eton, M|m| ............................................42 Turner, Katy ...................................................25 s|e-Wo|fe|, lzzy...............................................6 va||ey, Rebecca ..............................................34 Ward, Zach ......................................................7 We||s, Sarah ..................................................11 Wh|te, Oh|oe ..................................................14 Woodruff, Oaro|yn ..........................................15 Woodward, lzz|ey ..........................................54 Wunrow, Ju||ette Rose ...................................12 Zaber, Samue| ...............................................28 Zamar|ppa, Ohr|stopher .................................13 PrInted by Queen CIty PrInters SpecIaI thanks to AIan SchIIIhammer Ior Queen CIty`s contrIbutIon to thIs AnthoIogy Oover photo by Henry Astore
He who holds on, but expects the
world to change always seems to rise before the sun, and watch it in exchange. In the morning glory though, the color truly prances, and with the eternal gaze, real also, he dances.