Teen Ink 2: More Voices, More Visions
The second edition of Teen Ink captures the essence of what it means to be a teenager through honest voices that reverberate with the emotional highs and lows of teenage years. It is a diverse collection of prose, poetry, fiction and art representing the compelling moments that define teens' lives.

Pieces for this book were chosen from a collection of more than 300,000 submissions to TeenInk magazine, a nonprofit publication read by 3.5 million teens nationwide. Since its inception, TeenInk (formerly The 21st Century) has published more than 25,000 students. These young authors produce fresh, creative, honest and always compelling words that make TeenInk the standard for teen expression.

Subsequent books in this extraordinary series will focus on individual topics, exploring the extraordinary feelings and opinions of today's teens.

1100307599
Teen Ink 2: More Voices, More Visions
The second edition of Teen Ink captures the essence of what it means to be a teenager through honest voices that reverberate with the emotional highs and lows of teenage years. It is a diverse collection of prose, poetry, fiction and art representing the compelling moments that define teens' lives.

Pieces for this book were chosen from a collection of more than 300,000 submissions to TeenInk magazine, a nonprofit publication read by 3.5 million teens nationwide. Since its inception, TeenInk (formerly The 21st Century) has published more than 25,000 students. These young authors produce fresh, creative, honest and always compelling words that make TeenInk the standard for teen expression.

Subsequent books in this extraordinary series will focus on individual topics, exploring the extraordinary feelings and opinions of today's teens.

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Teen Ink 2: More Voices, More Visions

Teen Ink 2: More Voices, More Visions

Teen Ink 2: More Voices, More Visions

Teen Ink 2: More Voices, More Visions

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Overview

The second edition of Teen Ink captures the essence of what it means to be a teenager through honest voices that reverberate with the emotional highs and lows of teenage years. It is a diverse collection of prose, poetry, fiction and art representing the compelling moments that define teens' lives.

Pieces for this book were chosen from a collection of more than 300,000 submissions to TeenInk magazine, a nonprofit publication read by 3.5 million teens nationwide. Since its inception, TeenInk (formerly The 21st Century) has published more than 25,000 students. These young authors produce fresh, creative, honest and always compelling words that make TeenInk the standard for teen expression.

Subsequent books in this extraordinary series will focus on individual topics, exploring the extraordinary feelings and opinions of today's teens.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780757395352
Publisher: Health Communications, Incorporated
Publication date: 01/01/2010
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 300
File size: 3 MB
Age Range: 12 - 18 Years

About the Author

John and Stephanie H. Meyer are founders of The Young Authors Foundation, which publishes TeenInk, All royalties from TeenInk books are donated to this nonprofit foundation to further reading, writing and publishing opportunities for teenagers. Stephanie Meyer, editor of the book and magazine, holds masters' degrees in education and social work. John Meyer, publisher of the magazine, holds an M.B.A. and has published two successful business magazines.

Read an Excerpt

When Two Worlds Collide
by Gwen Steel

I was born in Minneapolis. The city is in my blood. But I live in the country and have been forced to cope. One thing I've always had trouble with is birds. How could anyone enjoy staring out the window for hours at these feather-brained creatures? My mother had always been one of those ridiculous birdwatcher types. She tried to raise her children with a respect for wildlife, but this had not been too effective with me.


One evening, a hummingbird caught my mother's eye. I'd heard the facts before: "One of nature's most fascinating creatures is the ruby-throated hummingbird. Its incredible wing speed allows it to hover in midair. Its miniature size . . ."


What made this particular "hummer" so odd, however, was that it had been sitting on the same perch, frozen in time for ten minutes like an icicle on a still winter morn. My mother got a stepladder and retrieved the bird from his perch. She inspected him. It appeared his tongue was paralyzed, and he was unable to drink the red liquid from the feeder. My mother handed the injured creature to me while she went inside for an eyedropper.


Never in my life had I felt as frightened as when I held that tiny life in my hands. Within the silky, smooth, green shell, the miniature heart beat so fast that I thought it literally might explode. I placed the eyedropper inside the long, graceful beak, and prayed that he would swallow.


At first, he only shuddered, but finally he managed to swallow. After a few minutes, he glided gracefully to the ash tree on the front lawn. Although it appeared that the bird was cured, something urged me to keep watching.


Within minutes, a second, slightly larger hummingbird appeared. He did not alight on the feeder, but instead hovered within a few feet of my face. He would fly to the ash tree, then back to me. It didn't take me long to realize that he was sending me a message, a sort of "S.O.S."


I crept to the base of the tree where I found the tiny creature's form quivering in the evening air. I slowly reached into the dewy grass to scoop up the bird. His feathers were damp now, his eyes closed. It seemed his heartbeat had slowed to a dull thud within his thumb-sized body.


"Please, please, be okay." He had asked me for help. Now he owed me a favor in return. I was asking him to stay alive.


It must have been a very tragic picture: a child, wiping her tear-stained face with her one free hand, while the other palm was cupped around a tiny, dying creature. Fate was taking its own course. It seemed hopeless.


The pulse from its heart was hardly recognizable, and the body was growing colder. Its throat, which moments before had been so brilliantly bright, was fading to a dull gray.


As a child clawed at the ground that evening, digging a grave for a creature she'd tried so desperately to save, she felt at first that she had proven herself correct: Her world and nature's were separate, not to be interfered with by outside forces. She had given all the comfort she could, but to what avail?


Yet she realized there are some things she could change and some she must simply accept. Either way, sometimes two worlds collide, and strangers must ask for, and be willing to receive, help from others.


Without this, survival is not only impossible, but meaningless.



(c)2001. All rights reserved. Reprinted from Teen Ink 2 - More Voices, More VIsions, edited by Stephanie H. Meyer and John Meyer. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means, without the written permission of the publisher. Publisher: Health Communications, Inc., 3201 SW 15th Street, Deerfield Beach, FL 33442.


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