A LITERARY JOURNAL PUBLISHING STANDOUT TEEN WRITERS AGES 13-19
Personal Reflection
by AISHA WAZIRI GALADIMA (Nigeria)
May 2023
The mountains are special, people have learnt. So now people visit them accompanied with dynamite
by PARIS EVANS (United States)
May 2023
They deny the true nature of their history and try to censor ours in the name of equality.
by DOREY COOTE (Canada)
February 2023
It is not pleasant to be torn between two worlds you love.
I know what it feels like.
by TAIEBA TABASSUM (Bangladesh)
February 2023
I wore low-powered glasses before. I could see myself in the mirror, but not clearly.
by GENEVIEVE SMITH (United States)
February 2023
Herring fish gather in the shallow stream behind the lake and through the trees.
by FATIMA MOHIUDDIN (Pakistan)
August 2022
The last move (the best move, the worst move, The Move) was almost four years ago
by ANNE BLACKWOOD (United States)
August 2022
There is nothing profound about any of this. There is everything beautiful about all of this.
by BRITNEY PHAM (Australia)
April 2019
The silence can be eerie
Dark, damp and cold
by DIANA (Ukraine)
March 2022
Since Ukraine has been invaded, I feel that my inner world has been invaded as well.
by ROMAN (Ukraine)
March 2022
For more than a week I have not been able to hear the voices of my relatives.
by YELYZAVETA (Ukraine)
March 2022
Lviv meets me with more air raid alerts, more panic attacks.
by VARVARA (Ukraine)
March 2022
there hasn't been a moment of silence since we set off. behind me—a three-month-old baby.
by ISABEL ALTAMIRANO (Canada)
April 2019
You always liked to watch the trains as they passed by, one after another, right on schedule. You liked the whooshing sound of the breaks as the train slowed into the station, and the whirring of the engine as it started up again.
by MAYA LINSLEY (Canada)
April 2019
I found love in the plastic heart of a run-down souvenir shop. Sweat had dried in a sticky landscape across my back, and I was out of breath from the sheer force of the midday sun, and I was standing in between . . .
by BIANCA NWOKEJI (Nigeria)
April 2019
Someone once asked me; "Bianca, why do you write?"
On hearing that, my lips arched with a flashed smile and I replied with complete honesty.
"Ever saw something so wrong but couldn't change it?
by GRACE LOVE (Australia)
September 2019
We walked along the small terrace of grass, the blinding heat of the sun forgotten . . .
by BAYA LAIMECHE (United States)
September 2019
She spoke with her hands, weaving stories out of air and breathing life into them . . .
by MARGHERITA MORO (Italy)
December 2019
The grass stings my thighs and whispers at me to move my legs so that it may look upon the stars
by ELLA GREEN (New Zealand)
December 2019
I try to think of death as an ocean; uncharted and unknown, but vast.
by SIRIN JITKLONGSUB (Thailand)
December 2019
These are the scents I will take with me when I leave this house.
by MAISHA EUZEBE (Dominica)
April 2021
My best friend and I always talk about how we're going to change the world.
by ELIJAH LIU (Singapore)
April 2021
Water waits and wastes away in wilted states. It waxes and wanes in winter weather and slips away in the spring fever.
by IZRAHMAE SUICO (The Philippines)
July 2021
Today, nature is fit in an open, square bus window with Mama obstructing the moving, alfresco greenery.
by MAY ZHENG (United States)
September 2021
Lisa hasn't changed at all from the way I remembered her from the local library.
by BRIELLE YOUNG (United States)
September 2021
The story my grandfather told continues to shape me today.
by MAXWELL SURPRENANT (United States)
September 2021
I long for the day when lockdown ends and I can safely visit Evie again.