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Blue Marble Review

Literary Journal for Young Writers

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Poetry

Family Hike

By Vivian Tsai

We march out—so early I can’t even see—

till Meg has a headache and John has to pee,

and Ruby is swearing she’ll die of despair

if another small nature bug lands in her hair.

 

“Now, camping’s a great way to spend time together,”

says Dad as we groan about grime and the weather.

“Just humor your father,” our mom chimes along,

but none of us join in her hiking trip song.

 

Come noon, I discover the map’s upside-down,

and Ruby and Meg both wear permanent frowns.

The lunches have melted, a PBJ puddle,

and even Dad’s beat when we do our group huddle.

 

On campground, we’re weary and beading with sweat

at the peak of what Dad says we’ll “never forget.”

He can’t pitch the tent, so we lie on the dirt

and the earth is so bumpy, our spinal cords hurt.

 

But the six of us match with our sore limbs and yawns

as Mom sings and I squeeze between Ruby and John.

We marvel together as stars come to peep,

and I’m grateful to Dad as I drift off to sleep.

 

 

Vivian Tsai currently studies computer science and applied math at Johns Hopkins University. She spends her free time doodling, writing letters, and playing tennis with friends.

An Impossible Rupture

By Maya Rabinowitz

The day after things changed

It rained buckets

Bubbles floating across mirrored puddles

 

I woke in grey violet

And left my dreams in a hurry

A flurry of heartbeats

Racking the dreary room

 

I took a drag through the rain

To count my words

 

To spread

Water from the

Crease of my cheek

The bridge of my nose

 

A silent story of sorrow

 

I warmed a can of

Salty metal soup

Til it hissed at the corners and

Overflowed the bowl

Cloudy liquid growing cold

As it clung to my throat

 

I could not stand

Inside my skin

I could not stand my head

 

Through years

Of shifting loss

The same prayer flags still

Drip from my doorframe

 

Still tangle on the synapses

That lie between wake and dream

 

May I never settle

May I always have a song to sing

 

 

 

Maya Rabinowitz is a sixteen-year-old lover of music and avid reader of anything poetic. She lives in Philadelphia, PA, in a quiet neighborhood with her two moms and her dog Ollie. She spends much of her free time writing, and her work has also been recognized by the Scholastic Art and Writing Awards.

 

A Thought

By Melody Xiao

After I die,

I will wander the world

the way I’ve always wanted to,

see the cherry blossoms in DC

and the broken ground of the Berlin Wall

and the barren earth of the DMZ

where the voices but not the souls of the others gone

linger.

 

And eventually

I will tire of the earthly things

that tower but do not speak.

Somehow I’ll find my way back home,

where I’m sure my grandmother will be waiting

sunlight warming the joints that no longer ache

watering her aloe plants

and a bowl of my favorite fried rice on the table.

 

 

Melody (Mel) is a high school junior from New Jersey. She has been writing poetry for about two years and has won a number of awards, including bronze in the NJCTE competition and a gold key in Scholastic Art and Writing. When not procrastinating and worrying about her upcoming exam, Mel reads, sings, and volunteers in and with her school (PS: her favorite ice cream flavor is Ben and Jerry’s  “The Tonight Dough with Jimmy Fallon).

A Note to my Collarbone Loving Sixteen-Year-Old Self

By Emily Wolst

How pathetic is it

I think over black coffee taken alone

That I belong to perhaps the only sub-culture

Of the Homo Sapiens species

That begins to cry when I catch a glimpse of my sun-tanned chest in the car mirror

Because my collarbones no longer protrude like some injured wing of a broken songbird

But are now hidden, more soft, the angularity more subtle under a layer of cushy flesh

Why is it that I find magnificence in the sharp lines of the combination of collagen and calcium

Which very protrusion I find sickening on the stray mutts that wander the street

How repulsive is it

That I find strength in what nature intends as a symbol of human weakness

 

 

Emily Wolst is an undergraduate English student at Lakehead University in Orillia, Ontario. She enjoys writing poetry and short creative fiction pieces. Her work has appeared in several local newspapers. She works part-time in a public library and spends her spare time reading both fiction and non-fiction and drinking hot coffee.

 

 

Spring in the Orchards

By N. C. Krueger

 

Oh, nothing,

Only the sun trickling through

The scent of

Cherry blossoms drifting through

The intertwining branches;

Only the cherry blossoms,

And the apple blossoms,

And the white wedding blossoms.

And the blossoms twined through

Sun-touched hair.

Oh, nothing,

Only this.

 

 

N. C. Krueger is a student who lives in the Twin Cities area. She is currently engaged in converting her flights of fancy into stories, poems, and comics.

 

Winter’s Cold Touch

By Talia Botelho

It is December
The frigid wind cuts my cheeks
Sadness creeps up behind me like a lion stalking its prey
It’s January
The snow is pressed against the door
I do not want to leave the house anyway
Because the sadness has caught up to me
It’s February
Then it’s March
Months pass like clockwork
The sadness has morphed from a small pest to a horrific monster
The cold seems to be endless
However one late March day
The grass seems greener
I noticed a tulip poking it’s head through the dirt
The sun is warm on my skin
The air smells of summer and ice cream and the beach
It is April
And I am happy

 

Talia Botelho is seventeen years old and  loves writing and reading. She also dances and plays the flute in her  free time.

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