Lines of Grace

My hand on paper Frozen in midair What should I write? About the wind on my face? The coolness of winter? The rays in the jubilant sky? I sit, in thought My mind reaches Trying to pull From the deepest part of mind Ideas I think The show last week The blue jay sitting in a tree Vines from our plant Reaching up to the sky One comes My hand starts moving Alive again With joy and grace Words appear Sitting there Boring looking Black and normal But yet What would I do without them? They are my lines of grace My way of communicating They are my language. Emily Yen, 11Houston TX

Losing Nani

After her grandmother dies, Maya reflects on what she most loved about her This December, I lost my nani (granny). I cannot even begin to describe the pain I feel right now. A lot of things I see around me have a bit of her in them; a lot reminds me of her. She had the most wonderful smile, and it aches my heart to know I will never see that smiling face again. A few months ago I read a book called Losing Grandpa. It is about a little girl who loses her wonderful grandfather to illness. It made me very sad, but I never thought that the same thing would happen to me, and so soon. Nani ran a little bookshop. She started it on her own. I used to spend hours in the shop with her, reading, talking, arranging books. She taught me about the magic of books, but she was never preachy. She used to weave stories around everything. She introduced me to many authors, like William Shakespeare and Charles Dickens—the first book I remember reading with her was Macbeth, Usborne Classics. We discussed it for hours . . . Once, a barefoot kid came to the shop and asked her how much for a pen. She said that there are many types of pens—some were for ten and some were for five and some for three. When he heard the number three, he was pleased. But his friend then asked him where he would even write with it. My lovely nani asked, “What do you write on?” Woman with Chicken He said that he wrote everything on a wall or on the road. My nani asked, “With what?” He shrugged and said, “With coal!” like it was the most natural thing to do. My nani smiled and then gave him a full set of pens, notebooks, and stationery. She said, “Write to your heart’s content, beta (my child) and come back for more when you are done. But you need to show me what you write.” This was Nani, always ready to help, caring, loving, working . . . I have learnt so much from her— she loved plants, she loved to cook, she loved to read . . . Once, I thought we could make a precious snack for all of us to eat together. My nani knew of a biscuit, and we decided to make it. At first I struggled, but my patient nani kept trying to fix it. My nani taught me so well that I finally made the biscuit even better than her. I kissed her and thanked her for teaching me how to make such a lovely biscuit. And we all had a yummy snack. What I am trying to say is that all grandmothers are wonderful, loving, and kind. They liven things up. But my nani was extraordinarily incredible. I love you, Nani. I will miss you always. Please be happy wherever you are. Maya Hooda, 10Noida, India Claire Jiang, 13Princeton, NJ

Sleep

The calm, warm light filled the room, Our voices, whispers. Laughter untangling into a soundless sleep. We threw ourselves into a lingering feeling. I held that feeling for a moment, Then hid it, Hid it so it could be safe, Hid it so I could carry on, on, In my deep, deep sleep. Iris Chalfen, 8Cambridge, United Kingdom

Willow Grove

My eyes open and smile as I hear the young cry of a rooster. I look up to the sky and say good morning to the world. The Snow Queen greets me with a benevolent gift of a curly white blossom. I smell the fresh gift of the queen as I emerge from the house to visit the world outside, plucking a myriad of rainbow blossoming buds that look like an endless field of happiness, dancing with the creatures of the world. A cry from the goose, whose tender feathers look like a long carpet of shining silk, calls the flock. The flock comes to their humble leader and dances with the sun. A splatter from the brook brings delightful treasures sent as gifts to our beloved Willow Grove. I stretch out my young hands hoping for permission to drink the water as though I could be drinking beauty itself. In return, I pick a tender daisy and carefully give it to the stream. I look to the sun and say a humble thanks for this providential act of kindness the world has given me. Eily A. Chiu, 9Virginia Beach, VA

Chinese Test

For Mason, a Chinese test feels like an odyssey It is time for the Chinese test to begin. I pick up my pencil, and focusedness is on my face as I write. Intensity stretches across the room with each moment. It is silent—so silent that I can hear the birds chirping . . . until . . . Oh, no! I forgot one of my words! I think to myself, I can’t fail after all this practice.  I think harder than I ever have. Even the loudest sounds can’t distract me. Finally, I think of it! Calmness rises over the stress and intenseness as I calmly write each word. I finish the first page, then the second. Excitement rises in my stomach. “I’m almost finished,” I say to myself. The third page is the hardest. I close my eyes as I let the nervousness flow out of my mouth, and I suck the courage in. I open my eyes and start writing again. Third and last page is complete! No—wait. Still one question . . . Excitement fades away. It’s the longest of all—write a Chinese paragraph. Each finished word disappears out of my mind, and each word ahead appears. It’s like a bridge forming ahead and pieces falling behind. As I take steps on the developing bridge in my head, the bank comes closer with each step I take. Excitement rises higher and higher in my stomach. Light closes upon me: I’m finished at last! Mason Li, 8Berwyn, PA

Little Writer Boy

A young boy spends his days sitting in an alley, writing Long ago, far across the open sea, lived a little writer boy. Young Little Writer Boy would march through town, his red notebook at his side and his head held high. A vivid blue pen sat strung tight to the notebook’s side. His ruffled overcoat swishing behind him in the wind, his grey tam pulled low over his head. The boy walked to the alleyway that he’d so often ventured to and put his back to the stone, garbage-strewn ground in the opening where he could still look out over the shops full of bustling people or hear the hollow ding dings of passing bikes. Little writer boy would study the people waiting in line at shops, then his pen would start to move across the five-by-five-inch paper of his notebook as if it had a mind of its own. The woman and poodle were really thieves. The old man wrapped in a scarf was a super villain in disguise, thought the boy. His heart would hop in excitement as he wrote, like it was doing hurdles but with no effort at all, as if it were flying over these hurdles. His heart would thump harder as the stories evolved around him, as the stories passed in his mind like an old-fashioned slideshow film. As the boy sat there, the polished black shoes of a black-suited man stopped inches from where he lay. The man rolled back the cuffs of his suit as if he were getting ready to give somebody a lump above their brow. Little Writer Boy looked up at him. The man’s red tie was even more vivid than the boy’s pen. His sleek hair shone in spots from the sun, and his black suit shone like obsidian. My Dream “Can I help you?” asked the little writer. “Who are you?” asked the man. The boy hesitated a moment. Then he said, “A writer.” The man eyed him, creasing his greasy brows. Then he walked away. The boy walked home still letting his pen run across the paper. He walked up the stairs to his room, closed the door, and sat down in his red, spindly chair, and he wrote. The following afternoon, the boy marched back to the alley and parked his butt where he could still survey the people of Van Isle. As he wrote, a woman in high heels walked up to him, stopping inches away from him. This woman wore a green dress with a beige overcoat and an animal-fur scarf. She wore a horrid smile that twitched upward with struggle. “May I help you?” asked the boy. “I was merely wondering what a respectable young man like you might be doing in an alleyway on your buttocks,” said the woman. “Writing.” The woman couldn’t hold her smile in anymore. “Who are you?” “I’m a writer.” “Have you anything that is published?” the woman said, chuckling at the boy’s ambition. The boy put a finger to his chin. “Published?” he asked. This time the woman gave a terrible, high, belly-shaking laugh. She seemed a lot like Santa Claus (an evil Santa Claus, that is). The people around her began to laugh too. “Ever read a book, boy?” the woman mocked. “’Course I have.” He put down his notebook but kept his eyes off the woman. “Those are published books.” “Oh.” “Have you any of those?” she asked. “I’m not sure.” “Then how do you know you’re a writer?” Little writer boy thought a while about this. When he got home, he sat in his spindly chair. His pen did not slide across the paper that night as it did every other night, nor did his heart leap the hurdles. The little writer boy didn’t go back to the alley the next day. Nor the next, nor the next, but a week later he did go back. “Who are you?” asked that same woman as she towered over him once more. “A writer,” the boy answered. “Have you any published books?” “I’m not sure.” “Then how do you know you are a writer?” “Because I write.” The woman scowled, then sighed, then went on her way. Satisfied, the boy came back the next day and the next and the next. Many thieves and super villains later, an elderly man in boots came up to him. “May I help you?” asked the boy. “Who might you be?” asked the man. “A writer.” “Oh,” said the man. “Have you any published books?” The boy stopped to think about this again. He tapped his forehead with his pen. Finally he looked up at the man’s grizzled face. “I do,” he said. “As a matter of fact, it is right here.” The boy handed the man his notebook, who read it and gave it back. “That is no published book,” said the old man. “It is,” said the boy. “You’ve read it.” The man squinted at him as if he were standing in a dark room. “What is your name, boy?” At this the boy smiled. “Little Writer Boy.” Jonah Christiansen-Barker, 13Campbell River, British Columbia, Canada Leticia Cheng, 9San Jose, CA

Happy Camper

Assorted natural materials Sage Millen, 13Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada

Springring

Whitewrite Flyhigh Windwing Blossombright Songsoul Mebe Beebold Iris Chalfen, 8Cambridge, United Kingdom