Stone Soup Magazine for young readers, writers, and artists

Podcast: Balancing Technology

Check out this podcast, created by Summer and Yelia, about the challenges of balancing technology in today’s digitally focused world.   https://soundcloud.com/user-28081890/balancing-technology-podcast  

Right Beneath the Clouds

This clarinet trio was inspired by two ideas. First was my perspective from my own apartment. Skyscrapers, bridges, Central Park, and construction outlined the melody of my piece, given to the clarinet. Shadows and overlaps between these structures formed the cello and piano parts for the first movement. Most of the pitches are based on the octatonic scale beginning on C. In the second movement, the inspiration comes from a very different source. “Quatuor pour la fin du temps” by the French composer Olivier Messiaen gave me the idea of unison between the voices, which served as the perfect contrast to the busy, opposing voices in the first movement. Altogether, I pictured the loud, busy life I might see if I was right below a cloud and looking down, while on the other hand, a full and unified blue sky would be seen if I just looked up. Take a listen to this piece on SoundCloud here: https://soundcloud.com/user-28081890/right-beneath-the-clouds Photograph titled “Parade of Clouds” by Asfia Jawed, published in our May 2018 issue.

Saturday Newsletter: June 8, 2019

“I am already breaking away, but not quite as rapidly as I would like.” Illustration by Olga Todorova, 12, for “Flying” by Margaret Bryan, 12. Published in Stone Soup March/April 2007 and The Stone Soup Book of Sports Stories (2018) A note from Emma Wood I am a runner. I usually run at least five miles six days a week, rain or shine, whether I have time or I don’t. I make the time. Or it’s more like that time doesn’t “count” to me—I have to run, so I find a way to do so. I recently ran my sixth marathon, but I didn’t really think of myself as a runner until I was training for my fourth marathon, in the spring of 2018. At some point during those four months leading up to the marathon, in the middle of what runners call a “training cycle,” I realized that running no longer felt like a chore. Ever. It was, in fact, usually the best part of my day. I love being outside in the beautiful Santa Cruz landscape, either running on trails through the forest or by the ocean. I love that it allows me to step away from my computer, from my work, from my mind, from myself, and simply be. I love running alone and with friends; I love having friends to run with; I love running with my dog, seeing her joy at simply running and trying to mirror it myself. Most of all, I love that it serves as a constant, humbling reminder that every day, I am starting over again—that it doesn’t matter how far or how fast I had run last week or last month. It is always about showing up and putting in the miles. In this way, running reminds me of writing. One of my writing teachers in college and a famous poet, Jorie Graham, once said to me, “Your next book isn’t going to write the next one for you.” I wrote her words on an index card, which I have taken with me and tacked to my bulletin board every time I’ve moved since then. Though I don’t have a published book yet, I do have a couple of manuscripts that I have been submitting and trying to publish. It is gratifying to finish a project after months after writing—just like it is gratifying to finish a marathon after months of training. But the last marathon won’t run the next one for you: you still have to lace up and put in the miles every day; every mile, whether it was hard or easy, makes you a stronger runner and brings you closer to your goal. With writing, too: you have to sit down and put in the words. Every word you write brings you one word closer to your goal. Even if you end up cutting it from the piece in revision, the writing is making you a better writer. I encourage you to try to sit down and write at least six days a week this summer. Maybe you want to write for 10 minutes. Maybe you want to write one page a day. Regardless the goal, remember it is about showing up, putting in the time, and doing the work. Anyone can be a runner, and anyone can be a writer. But you have to be willing to work. Until next time, Big news for our overseas readers – print copies now delivered worldwide! At last, we’ve done it: we are set up to deliver print issues of Stone Soup magazine all over the world! And in the process, we have managed to reduce the price for our Canadian subscribers. Whether you are in the UK, China, Singapore, Australia, New Zealand, India, Korea, or anywhere in the Americas or Europe, if you have a mailbox, we can deliver Stone Soup to it. The prices are quoted in US dollars, with shipping included, by region: $89.99 a year for the USA and the UK, $119.99 for Europe and Canada, and  $129.99 a year for Asia, Australia, India and the rest of the world. Visit our online store to see all the options, and to buy your subscription today! Highlights from the past week online Don’t miss the latest content from our Book Reviewers and Young Bloggers at Stonesoup.com. Do you play the popular video game Fornite? On Monday we published a piece that discusses whether or the not the phenomenon is to dying down. See what Daniel has to say here. Lukas reflects on happiness in his post from this week: “As I thought back, I realized that in all the times where I had fun, had joy, there were people surrounding me.” Is this true for you too? Leave a comment and tell us what you think. Tara reviews the classic Ramona Quimby series of books. Why does she enjoy them so much? “Maybe it’s because author Beverly Cleary developed the characters so well in our minds, it’s as if they are your best friend. Maybe it’s because the adventures Ramona gets into are so relatable and funny.” Read more of Tara’s thoughts here. Contest and partnership news Contest: Write a Book! Why not use Emma’s writing tips to finish your entry for our summer contest? We are looking for book-length writing in all forms and genres by kids aged 14 and under (we have extended our usual age limit for this contest). The deadline for entries is August 15th, so you have the whole summer to work on perfecting your book, whether it is a novel, a collection of poetry or short stories, a memoir, or other prose. There will be three placed winners, and we will publish all three winning books in various forms. Visit our contest page and Submittable entry page for full details. From Stone Soup March/April 2007 Flying By Margaret Bryan, 12 Illustrated by Olga Todorova,12 STARTING LINE I roll my head from side to side in an attempt to be nonchalant. My teammates look at me questioningly, and then ask, “Can we go now?” impatiently I