How We Produce Pen & Paper
          Pen & Paper, The Unquowa School’s literary and art magazine, is published annually and ofers an outlet for students to share their literary and artistic talent. Students in grades 5-8 submit writing, photography, art, and poetry throughout the year for consideration.
          The magazine embraces the original mission of its founders (Page 4) while continually incorporating new ideas. The editorial, art, and production staf meet weekly after school to write, edit, and eventually, produce the magazine. The literary and art sections of Pen & Paper are determined by accepted student submissions. The placement of student work is determined by overall ft within the magazine’s thematic sections and the editorial staf’s standards of excellence.
          The editorial staf, invited to Pen & Paper by their teachers, focuses on writing their own work, selecting pieces for publication, and providing feedback for submissions. All pieces, writing and art, are made anonymous to the editorial committee, keeping the review process as objective as possible. Editorial committee members review selections to fnalize submissions. Editors then organize print submissions for review and inviting peers to submit work for publication. The art staf links writing to illustration, pursues individual art projects, and selects the cover photo. Lastly, the production staf is charged with the fnal layout of the magazine and make fnal edits and adjustments before going to print.
          Pen & Paper JUNE 2023 1
        Cover Art
          Emily Toolan
          New Horizons
          
    Digital photograph
          Grade 7
          2 JUNE 2023 Pen & Paper
        
    Volume 13 JUNE 2023 The Unquowa School 981 Stratfeld Road Fairfeld, CT 06825 (203) 336-3801 unquowa.org
        Horizons” Pen & Paper JUNE 2023 3 The literary and art magazine of The Unquowa School
        Pen & Paper
        “New
        2023 Pen & Paper Staf
          The mission of Pen & Paper is to provide opportunities for students to embrace wonder and challenge themselves to freely express their imagination and passion for art and writing.
          
    4 JUNE 2023 Pen & Paper
        
              
              
            
            Editorial Board
          
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    Pen & Paper JUNE 2023 5
        Matteo Brebbia ‘24 Editor
          Tanyse Floyd ‘23 Editor
          Piper Carillo-Foote ‘24 Editor
          Bryael Gonzalez ‘24 Editor
          Ethan Kirk ‘23 Editor
          Sarah Maximin ‘24 Editor
          Virginia Murphy ‘24 Editor
          Mateo Rojas ‘23 Editor
          Raleigh Simmonds ‘23 Editor
          Emily Toolan Editor
          Michael Toolan Editor
          Ebba Werring Editor
          Eloise Young Editor
          Mr. Eric Snow Adviser
          Mrs. Krissy Ponden Art Consultant
          Coco Thomson ‘24 Editor
          Noah Kurzenberger Editor-in-Chief
          
              
              
            
            Dedication
          This year’s edition of Pen & Paper is dedicated to our beloved science teacher, the late Craig Knebel. Mr. Knebel died unexpectedly last summer and we have all felt the heavy weight of his loss throughout this frst year without him. Mr. Knebel was an outstanding person, and a fantastic teacher who was loved by every student he taught. He inspired each of us through his love of science, and he was always quick and ready with jokes and a bright smile. Student excitement and enjoyment were his top priorities, and we miss his presence in our lives. Mr. Knebel supported each and every one of the students in his class in so many different ways, and his ingenuity, kindness, attentiveness, and love will forever be remembered by the Unquowa school. Mr. Knebel nurtured passion for the natural world in students, and we hope you can see some of that refected in the pieces of this year’s edition. Rest in peace and power, Mr. K.
          
    6 JUNE 2023 Pen & Paper
        Dear Reader,
          I am more than proud to announce our thirteenth edition of Pen & Paper: “New Horizons.” As Editor-in-Chief, this edition holds a special place in my heart because of the memories our staf has made as we worked tirelessly to put this publication together. My ultimate goal for this issue was to make something meaningful: a magazine worth reading, and. I think we were able to create something even more than that: a magazine worth coming back to again and again to glean wisdom from these young poets, writers, and artists.
          I hope the creative hours we spent show through our words and images, making it just as special to you as it is to us. Through the unique thoughts of its contributors, this year’s edition shines a spotlight on the concept of reminisce, refection, and remembrance. The issue takes a deep dive inside the diverse minds of those at our school, melding together into our own beautiful horizon as many of us get ready to leave our beloved school and branch out into high school. “New Horizons” could not have been created without the cooperation and collaboration of our team, ranging from Grades 5 through 8. Despite our difference in age, we came together to share our creations with one another, and glean the best of the best from them for publication. This year as Editor-in-Chief was a remarkable one for me, a wonderful way to end my time at Unquowa.
          This edition of Pen & Paper could not have been possible without all of this in the Upper School. Thank you for your submissions and support.
          We hope you enjoy!
          Thank You, Noah Kurzenberger Editor and Chief
          
          Pen & Paper JUNE 2023 7
        From the Editor
        (Bold denotes artwork)
          A Song of Sand and Fire
          by Alegria Rojas ‘25
          Wild Thing
          Yes!
          by Eloise Young ‘23
          
          by Eloise Young ‘23
          
          Creation of A by Alegria Rojas ‘25
          Little Tree by Vivian Winkelmann ‘25
          Albatross by Alegria Rojas ‘25
          Me, Myself, and I by Chipili Dumbwizi ‘24
          Birthday by Oola Breen-Ryan ‘25
          Serenity by Ebba Werring ‘23
          Purple Mountain Majesties by Sarah Maximin ‘24
          The Inevitable Sunlight by Oola Breen-Ryan ‘25
          Standing In by Virginia Murphy ‘24
          Scattered
          by Alegria Rojas ‘25
          Daisy, Daisy by Coco Thomson ‘24
          summertime sorrow by Noah Kurzenberger ‘23
          Cloud Islands by Alegria Rojas ‘25
          Gloria by Alegria Rojas ‘25
          NYCraft by Virginia Murphy ‘24
          by Adrian Omisore ‘24
          ‘24
          by Ebba Werring ‘24
          33 Memories by Oola Breen-Ryan ‘25
          From Up Afar by Michael Toolan ‘24
          36
          37 Clipped Wing by Virginia Murphy ‘24
          38 Pair of Wings, Never Used by Eliza Raben ‘23
          40 Walking in the Dark by Raleigh Simmonds ‘23
          41 Desert Sunset by Matteo Brebbia ‘24
          42 Ojo Kleki
          by Eliza Raben ‘23
          
          Stopping by Woods by Sylvia
          Barbuto ‘25
          
          The Snowfakes
          by Emily Toolan ‘24
          
          Avian Quartert by Eliza
          Raben ‘23
          
          Windows 2023
          by Alegria Rojas ‘25
          
          The Empty Page by Oola Breen-Ryan ‘25
          Rainbow Bridge by Alegria Rojas ‘25 54
          The Wind Blows Free by Alegria Rojas ‘25
          Where All the Other Trees Did Fall by Matteo Brebbia ‘24 Grasp by Eliza
          Raben ‘23
          
          The Fey Court by Coco Thomson
          ‘24
          
          The Great V by Virginia Murphy
          ‘24
          
          The Sun Dips Behind by Matteo Brebbia ‘24
          Fruit of the Vine by Virginia Murphy
          ‘24
          
          Frond of Beauty
          by Chipili Dumbwizi ‘24
          
          River Mountains
          by Alegria Rojas ‘25
          
          The Winter of Our Thirteenth Birthday by Oola
          Breen-Ryan ‘25
          
          8 JUNE 2023 Pen & Paper
        Table of Contents
        10 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29
        Partition Plan
        Raindrop
        Brebbia
        31 Edifce
        32 Photographic Memory
        The
        by Matteo
        by Chipili Dumbwizi ‘24
        64
        30 44 45 46 48 50 52 55 56 57 58 59 60 62 61
        by Bryael Gonzalez ‘24
          
          Skelly by Wil Falk ‘23
          Untrodden Snow
          by Eliza Raben ‘23
          
          Shooting Palm Tree
          by Matteo Brebbia ‘24
          
          Much Much More by Oola
          Breen-Ryan ‘25
          
          Cronch
          by Matteo Brebbia ‘24
          
          Ode to the Murkey Water on Weston Street by Coco Thomson ‘24
          Moonglow by Raleigh Simmonds ‘23
          Running by Virginia Murphy ‘24
          by Noah Kurzenberger ‘23
          by Raleigh Simmonds ‘23
          
          Actress with a Malleable Face by Eddie Musser
          ‘23 mirror by Noah Kurzenberger ‘23
          
          by Ethan Kirk ‘23
          by
          by Matteo Brebbia ‘24
          
          Ode to
        Blood
        thoughts
        Moving On
        Stranger
        Alone
        Oola Breen-Ryan
        66 67 68 70 74 75 79 80 weeping willows
        Through the Years
        Stardust
        Pen & Paper JUNE 2023 9 Ships in the Night
        the warm smoke of cigarettes
        by Kaitlyn Mesiya ‘26 Phantom
        Matteo Brebbia ‘24
        by
        ‘25
        by Noah Kurzenberger ‘23 Misty Lamp by Piper Carillo-Foote ‘24
        by Virginia Murphy ‘24
        by Matteo Brebbia ‘24
        by Ashlee Kirk ‘26
        by Noah Kurzenberger ‘23 Lynx by Ashlee Kirk ‘26 The Pause
        Doomscrolling
        Profle
        by Oola Breen-Ryan ‘25
        Tree
        Life
        Breaking Free by Mason Gray ‘24 One More Sip by Raleigh Simmonds ‘23 115 112 Typical Refection by Chipili Dumbwizi ‘24 The New School Uniform by Bryael Gonzalez ‘24 113 Welcome to Kindergarten! by Michael Toolan ‘24 128 My Endless Sea of Song by Wil Falk ‘23 Vignettes by Oola Breen-Ryan ‘25 A Sound in the Night by Matteo Brebbia ‘24 Vibrant Waves by Raleigh Simmonds ‘23 Ghosts of the Classroom by Virginia Murphy ‘24 Unlocking Their Future by Julia Broder ‘23 34 by Noah Kurzenberger ‘23 Do You Like What You See? by Coco Thomson ‘24 Flame by Matteo Brebbia ‘24 120 Caged Fear by Ava Sylvestro ‘23 121 Why Can’t I Be Like Them? by Tanyse Floyd ‘23 122 The Communities Behind the Courts by Teddy Kushel ‘23 124 Flower Fission by Ty Srihari ‘23 125 For Your Pleasure by Eddie Musser ‘23 126 Record Breaking by Ethan Kirk ‘23 127 Poverty’s Uneven Plates by Emily Toolan ‘24 it’s just a phase by Wil Falk ‘23 71 72 76 81 82 84 85 86 88 89 90 92 94 95 96 98 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 114 116 118 119
        by Anson Pitts ‘24 Perspective|Perspectiva by Mateo Rojas ‘23
        A Song of Sand and Fire
          
    Digital photograph
          Grade 6
          Alegria Rojas
          10 JUNE 2023 Pen & Paper
        
    Pen & Paper JUNE 2023 11
        Daylight
        Eloise Young
          Wild Thing
          Mixed media
          Grade 8
          
    12 JUNE 2023 Pen & Paper
        Eloise Young Yes! Mixed media
          Grade 8
          
    Pen & Paper JUNE 2023 13
        Alegria Rojas
          The Creation of A Digital photograph
          Grade 6
          
    14 JUNE 2023 Pen & Paper
        Little Tree
          Vivian Winkelmann
          Grade 6
          Snow falls, tracks form
          
    The little hare races home before the storm Trees cut, dragged to their home
          Decorated with lights
          Pictures recorded on phones
          Presents dropped under each limb
          Little weights strung on him
          Diferent sculptures each time Then its nailed to the wall
          Sitting there near some twine, it hasn’t been watered But the homeowners claim its fne
          “Little tree! Oh little tree!?
          Friends yell from next door. They lean on each other through the window Till there life fades away.
          Pen & Paper JUNE 2023 15
        Alegria Rojas
          Albatross
          Digital photograph
          Grade 6
          
    
              
              
            
            Me, Myself, and I Chipili Dumbwizi Grade
          7
          The din of gossiping flls the air
          The voices spinning round and round, but I just don’t seem to care.
          Everyone getting into groups of pairs or threes
          While I’m there alone like the crooked oak tree
          Standing there all alone
          Wishing for someone to help me fght this feeling
          Of the unknown.
          Can’t help but think…
          What would happen if I was gone in a blink?
          Would anyone care?
          Would anyone dare to think of me? No.
          Because it’s just me, myself, and I.
          But would I have to die for someone, For anyone, to care?
          To talk about the curls that run thoroughly through my hair, Or think about the way I said specifc words, That would fall of my lips like petals, Hitting the ground with no meaning . No.
          Because it me, myself, and I .
          Pen & Paper JUNE 2023 17
        
              
              
            
            Birthday
          Oola Breen-Ryan Grade 6
          My life ended on my birthday. How ironic. The cake had neon green letters spelling out “Happy Birthday Ella” on the top. I’d broken of a piece of the letter “a”, so it just said “Hppy”. The letters tasted like sawdust.
          The letters had returned in the mail as I was opening my gifts. Only Dad was there, because Mom had left a week earlier. Maybe she would come back, though, once I had gotten into an Ivy League university and she had a reason to be proud of me.
          I knew almost immediately that I hadn’t gotten into Yale, Columbia, or Dartmouth. The envelopes were tiny, but I opened them anyway. “We regret to inform you” was the frst line of each.
          I wiped away my tears and glanced at the envelope for Harvard. It was larger than the others. My heart sped up.
          Addressed incorrectly. My address, 99 Poplin Lane, had been confused with 99 Pansy Lane. I held back my tears until the inside of my mouth bled. I hadn’t even realized that I was biting it until the metallic taste swarmed around my tongue.
          18 JUNE 2023 Pen & Paper
        
    Ebba Werring Serenity
        art
        8 Pen & Paper JUNE 2023 19
        Digital
        Grade
        
    20 JUNE 2023 Pen & Paper
        Sarah Maximin
          Purple Mountain Majesties
          Digital Photograph
          Grade 7
          
              
              
            
            The Inevitable Sunlight
          Oola Breen-Ryan Grade 6
          
          Many miles away from here, it’s a perfectly normal, sunny day. But where we are, it’s thirteen degrees outside, below freezing. The trees rustle in the wind. No, they don’t rustle—they fuctuate, they wave, they snap, they fall like dominoes.
          The rain pours down, lives are lost, the hurricane rages on, and yet—
          somewhere in the world, sunlight is beaming down, as if nothing is wrong, as if everything is perfect.
          What defnes “perfect”?
          Anywhere but here, right now, in this moment.
          My umbrella, a yellow splash in the dark and depressing torrent of rain, rolls away like the inevitable sunlight, far away from this corner of the world.
          Pen & Paper JUNE 2023 21
        
              
              
            
            Standing In
          Virginia Murphy Grade 7
          
          I step outside and feel the cold chill down my spine
          A harsh breeze blows over
          I know it is coming
          My toes go numb and I feel my nose start to run
          The ice on the road makes it feel like an ice rink
          Slipping and sliding all over
          I smell its fresh sent
          And I know its coming
          I feel an excited jolt rush through my body
          And then at that moment I feel it
          Its soft touch
          Its frigid chill on my skin as it melts
          It reminds me of the holidays
          The warmth of the fre
          The laughter of family and friends
          All I know is that this is where I want to be Standing in the snow
          22 JUNE 2023 Pen & Paper
        Alegria Rojas Scattered
          Digital photograph
          
    Pen & Paper JUNE 2023 23
        Grade 6
        
    24 JUNE 2023 Pen & Paper
        Coco Thomson
          Daisy, Daisy
          Digital photograph
          Grade 7
          
              
              
            
            summertime sorrow
          Noah Kurzenberger
          
          Grade 8
          our fowers had bloomed swinging through the meadow lacking ease your eyes sparkled in the sunlight rays shining high up above it seemed as if nothing could take us resting there forever sentenced to a life of pure joy along with no cure
          you were there to stay our bothers deemed irrelevant the sun gleaming on my skin
          your hands in my hands your eyes on mine a smile was once formed for the very last time
          the cheer will falter the pleasure once dissolves and once we’ve reached our end i see you never cared not one ounce at all
          Pen & Paper JUNE 2023 25
        Alegria Rojas
          Cloud Islands
          
    Digital photograph
          Grade 6
          26 JUNE 2023 Pen & Paper
        
    Pen & Paper JUNE 2023 27
        Alegria Rojas
          Gloria Digital photograph
          Grade 6
          Matteo Brebbia
          Virginia Murphy
          Hands
          NYCraft
          
    Digital photograph
          Digital photograph
          Grade 6
          Grade 7
          28
        28 JUNE 2023 Pen & Paper
        
              
              
            
            Partition Plan
          Adrian Omisore
          
          Grade 7
          Why do you come here to steal our land?
          Did you think we wouldn’t take a stand?
          There you are, standing for us to glare;
          Hate us breathing Indian air.
          Why don’t you leave us alone?
          Can’t live in peace;
          Intruders in our home.
          Break in and steal our own.
          Nothing to do, Nothing to say,
          We just want someone to send them away.
          Waiting for the color red to drop;
          Scared for our lives;
          It needs to stop.
          Pen & Paper JUNE 2023 29
        
              
              
            
            The Raindrop
          Matteo Brebbia Grade 7
          
          It starts with one
          Just one
          One. little. drop.
          One drop descending from the heavens
          Like angel with a halo of rainbow light
          Refracted through the sunbeams that pierce its glassy shell
          One drop before millions of others follow in its wake
          Like fsh following food
          A cult blindly following its leader
          And all of the miniscule little droplets
          Causing pinpricks of moisture on a hunched man
          Walking down a damp dark alleyway
          Its walls closing in like a trash compactor
          All of the drops felt but not acknowledged
          Seen but not cared about
          They are just drops of water
          lakes shrunken down to a miniscule beads
          Like the soul of someone not paid attention to
          Not acknowledged
          Seen but not cared about
          All of these drops are so small but can mean so much
          Just like the soul of someone not paid attention to
          The water can cool a village
          Quench the thirst of a poor animal
          Feed the roots of a plant sufering from draught
          Just like a soul can have so many good ideas
          So many things to say
          Opinions to express
          But these things
          The rain
          The soul
          Can be smothered
          Smothered by unrecognition
          By not being acknowledged
          But once it is
          Once someone asks
          Someone cares
          Amazing things start to happen
          30 JUNE 2023 Pen & Paper
        
    31
        Chipili Dumbwizi
          Edifce
          Pen & Paper JUNE 2023 31
        Digital photograph Grade 7
          Ebba Werring
          Photographic Memory
          
    Digital illustration
          Grade 8
          32 JUNE 2023 Pen & Paper
        
              
              
            
            Memories
          Oola Breen-Ryan Grade 6
          Mia: I’m going to miss her.
          I can understand, Mia. Losing your daughter like that must have been hard.
          Mia: It was just so sudden, you know?
          Can you tell me about your favorite memory of her?
          Mia: Yeah, let’s see…when she was in ffth grade, we were going for a walk and she found a baby bird just lying in the middle of the road. I wanted to let it be, but she picked it up and put it back in its nest. It sounds weird, I know, but I’ll always just think of her in that moment. It was just so startling for me—for all of us—when she passed away. She had always been this kind fgure in our lives, and then she was gone.
          Wow, Mia! Thank you for sharing that.
          Mia: You remind me so much of her, and not just in the name. I remember she wanted to name you Emiline, but I thought that it was strange for kids to be named after their parents. She was determined, though, so she hid the birth certifcate from me for the frst three years of your life. She convinced me that your name was Ella.
          I’m going to miss her, too.
          Mia: Now that she’s just a memory, all of the small little details about her life that didn’t seem important before are now the most signifcant things in the world.
          She really was an amazing person.
          Mia: She was. She really, really was.
          Pen & Paper JUNE 2023 33
        Lennie: Oh, hello, Emiline—it’s a bit late to be checking out books from the library.
          I’m not here to read. I have a few questions. Do you mind?
          Lennie: No, not at all.
          Okay. What do you think your favorite memory is of her?
          Lennie: I didn’t know her very well…she just came into this library quite a lot when she was younger.
          What was her favorite book?
          Lennie: She absolutely loved “From the Mixed-Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler”. She had read it so many times, the covers were practically falling of. One time, another kid tried to take it out, and she pulled the fre alarm just to keep him from reading it. She was never afraid to express her opinion, I remember, and she would always do the right thing—aside from the fre alarm incident.
          Ha, that’s funny.
          Lennie: The library will feel empty without her, but her memory will live on.
          Hi. I just wanted to talk to you a little bit about her. I hope this doesn’t seem intrusive.
          Mr. Haroldson: Of course not, Em. Ask away.
          Um, okay. What was your favorite memory of her?
          34 JUNE 2023 Pen & Paper
        Mr. Haroldson: Hmmm, there were so many. I’ll always remember the day that I proposed to her. I took her out to dinner at a fancy restaurant, where I had coordinated a musical arrangement with the band playing. Anyway, right as the song was about to begin, she got up and walked away. When the band started playing, I panicked, followed her, and ended up proposing to her in a bathroom stall. When I asked if she would marry me, though, she laughed. And I thought, Oh no, is this too soon? So I told her that she didn’t have to say yes if she didn’t want to. She started cracking up. Then guess what she said.
          What?
          Mr. Haroldson: She had intentionally led me to the bathroom stall so there wouldn’t be so many people watching us. (*Laughs*). How she found out that I was planning on proposing, I don’t know, but she said yes and that’s all that matters. Your mother certainly was a unique woman.
          That’s sweet, Dad.
          Emiline: I think the thing that I’ll remember most about her was the way she was always the kindest person in the room.
          She was an extrovert, and she was nice, and she was caring for everyone.
          I wish she was more than just a memory.
          Are people ever really just memories?
          Pen & Paper JUNE 2023 35
        
              
              
            
            From Up Afar
          Michael Toolan Grade
          
          7
          It begins with restlessness
          And then a calm voice lets us all know
          To buckle our seatbelts
          And we’ll be of But waiting still feels like forever
          Then all of a sudden
          Without warning, it starts
          The wheels of the plane turning
          Everything seems to be shaking
          And then we’re of the ground
          Out the window land is shrinking
          Through a cloud, everything covered
          Blinded, nothing can be seen
          It feels calm, serene, peaceful Like everything is okay
          Until all is clear again
          And reality is back
          Slowly revealing itself
          Then clouds just drift by I ponder and dream
          The world seems a little smaller
          From up afar
          36 JUNE 2023 Pen & Paper
        
    Virgina
          Murphy Clipped Wing Digital photograph Grade 7
        
              
              
            
            Pair of Wings, Never Used
          Eliza Raben
          
          Grade 8
          I saw an advertisement in the paper yesterday.
          It read “Pair of Wings, Never Used.”
          There was a photo and it was a pair of wings. It was hard to tell the scale but they looked big.
          They were the color of something you saw in a dream once, where you wake up and you can’t quite pin down what it looked like.
          I tried to recount my dream to a friend and she said
          It sounds like you don’t remember much.
          I know, I said,
          But I thought I did.
          Pair of Wings, never used.
          The feathers remind me of coins falling through fountain waters.
          I wonder what kind of bird they came from. The number in the advertisement is out of order, but I try twice and on the second ring someone picks up.
          You can keep the wings, She says.
          I got them from an angel, but they don’t go with my wall decor.
          I give her fve dollars for those wings. They arrive on my doorstep before the moon rises.
          The feathers are very soft beneath my hands.
          38 JUNE 2023 Pen & Paper
        When I hold the wings up to the ceiling light, they drip translucent like hot wax.
          I set them on the mantelpiece and they fash like coins in the ceiling light.
          They look beautiful. They look wilted.
          They look like something old and past its prime that you see in your dead grandmother’s house when they come to collect her things.
          They look like something bequeathed in the will that you don’t quite know what to do with.
          They look beautiful.
          I don’t think I should have seen them.
          When I go to bed, I dream of overhearing half of a conversation in the airport.
          Someone is talking on her phone. I don’t know what she’s saying, but I know that I shouldn’t’ve heard it.
          I think the plane crashed but I don’t really remember.
          There were birds singing outside the little square window.
          I wake up.
          I don’t talk about my dream.
          I don’t look up,
          Because what if the ceiling is made of wax?
          The wings watch (over?) me when I pass.
          They were never used.
          Pen & Paper JUNE 2023 39
        
              
              
            
            Walking in the Dark
          Raleigh Simmonds
          
          Grade 7
          Walking in the dark, with the blanket of night
          When out of the blue, comes a shimmer of light
          
    A small little street lamp, hidden in a grove
          Standing alone, on a road named “Clove”
          The stalk a dark green, and the light a bright white
          Resembling a fower, which blooms only at night.
          40 JUNE 2023 Pen & Paper
        
    Pen & Paper JUNE 2023 41
        Matteo Brebbia
          Desert Sunset
          Digital photograph
          Grade 7
          
    42 JUNE 2023 Pen & Paper
        Eliza Raben
          Ojo Kleki
          Digital illustration
          Grade 8
          
    Pen & Paper JUNE 2023 43
        
    44 JUNE 2023 Pen & Paper
        Sylvia Barbuto
          Stopping by Woods
          Digital photograph
          Grade 6
          
              
              
            
            The Snowfakes
          Emily Toolan
          
          Grade 7
          I look out the window in my room
          The frost glazes the glass
          And I feel a rush of excitement
          As I watch the snowfakes slowly fall
          All diferent shapes
          All diferent sizes
          Like beautiful prizes
          There are Hundreds Thousands
          Falling gracefully
          Like dancing ballerinas
          I rush down the stairs
          Putting on my winter boots
          I walk outside
          Making imprints in the white fufy snow
          My footprints trailing behind me
          A cold gust of wind passes by me
          Sending shivers down my spine
          Kids are playing in the yards
          Laughing
          Making snowmen
          Throwing snowballs
          But my mind is the snowfakes
          Looking down on my hand
          I see each snowfake falling onto it
          Melting
          They are so small
          So unique
          Like this chilly winter day
          Never to be repeated again
          Pen & Paper JUNE 2023 45
        Avian Quartet
          Digital photographs
          
    Grade 8
          
    Eliza Raben
          46 JUNE 2023 Pen & Paper
        
    
    Pen & Paper JUNE 2023 47
        Alegria Rojas
          Windows 2023
          
    Digital photograph
          Grade 6
          48 JUNE 2023 Pen & Paper
        
    Pen & Paper JUNE 2023 49
        
              
              
            
            The Empty Page
          Oola-Breen Ryan Grade 6
          The girl was taking part in a staring contest with her piece of paper.
          Just come up with something, she thought. Come on. It’s not hard.
          But she couldn’t. She thought and thought, but her brain was completely blank—much like the faded lined paper sitting solemnly on her desk. The submissions closed in two days, and she was desperate to submit something, anything. She didn’t care if, by the time she was done writing, the only thing to show for it was an un-edited limerick about potatoes. She would still submit it. But if her mind was usually an inkwell, today it was an empty glass, flled with nothing but air. The girl grit her teeth and pressed her pencil so hard against the paper, the tip broke of. She would fnd inspiration. She would write an amazing story that would blow the editors away.
          But what, exactly, would that story be?
          An hour later, the girl had succeeded in solving the Rubik’s cube on her desk. Her pencils were lined up in order of their size, each sharpened to a thin point. The bowl of chocolate chips that she had brought in as a snack had been reflled
          50 JUNE 2023 Pen & Paper
        twice and, at this point, was only a memory. But her page remained empty. Her mind hurt from all of the not-thinking. And, slowly, she began to cry. The paper became wet with tears. The girl sobbed, not quite sure why she was crying. Was it frustration, slowly building up in her? Did she accidentally and unknowingly stab herself with the sharp pencils?
          The girl cried until she thought she couldn’t cry any more. She felt dizzy and disconnected from her body. She collapsed on her desk, feeling hopeless.
          But then the ideas began to trickle in. Slowly, at frst. They dripped in like molasses, slow and steady. Soon they began to speed up, entering at a brisk pace, then jumping, leaping, spinning around her mind. They came in like a food, as fast and emotional as her tears. She rushed to jot them down, but they were too fast. They removed any doubt she’d had about her skills as a writer. Soon, her page was flled with scribbled notes. She took it all in.
          Then she smiled, took a fresh piece of paper, and, after hours of doing absolutely nothing, started to write.
          Pen & Paper JUNE 2023 51
        
    52 JUNE 2023 Pen & Paper
        Alegria Rojas
          Rainbow Bridge
          
    Digital photograph
          Grade 6
          Pen & Paper JUNE 2023 53
        Alegria Rojas
          The Wind Blows Free
          Digital photograph
          Grade 6
          
    54 JUNE 2023 Pen & Paper
        
              
              
            
            Where All the Other Trees Did Fall
          Matteo Brebbia Grade 7
          
          I’m walking down a moonlit path
          This forest in the aftermath
          Of a storm so strong it brought down trees once standing tall
          With squall after squall after squall after squall
          Suddenly my path is disturbed
          And suddenly, I’m quite perturbed
          For there is one tree, standing tall
          Where all the other trees did fall
          It is such a lonely tree
          It leaves swishing in the midnight breeze
          The moon refects of its shining foliage
          The bodies of its fallen comrades
          Are on the ground, the storm got them pretty bad
          But this tree still stands tall
          Where all all the other trees did fall
          I wonder to myself
          Why does this tree stand all by itself?
          With no fellow trees it can call its friends
          Standing with it until the end
          The storm has separated them all
          And though it may just be the wind through the breeze
          I swear I hear a sorrowful call
          A call of remorse and unease
          A call of a tree still standing tall
          Where all the other trees did fall
          Where all the other trees did fall
          Pen & Paper JUNE 2023 55
        Grasp
          
    Digital illustration
          Grade 8
          56 JUNE 2023 Pen & Paper
        Eliza Raben
          
    Pen & Paper JUNE 2023 57
        Coco Thomson
          The Fey Court
          Digital photograph
          Grade 7
          Virginia Murphy
          The Great V
          Digital photograph
          Grade 7
          
    58 JUNE 2023 Pen & Paper
        
              
              
            
            The Sun Dips Behind
          Matteo Brebbia
          
          Grade 7
          The sun dips behind the river
          Behind the river of mountains
          Its rays diminished to slivers of light
          Behind the river of mountains
          They dip
          They fow
          One after another they rise
          They outline the reds of the skies
          The sun setting further now
          Its horizon dimmer and dimmer
          The mountains more beautiful than ever somehow
          The shrubs are the swimmers
          In the river of mountains
          The clouds a faint pink
          Dimmer and dimmer
          And to myself I think
          I wish I could be the swimmer
          In the river of mountains
          I would trek the trails
          Up and up I’d walk
          Slowly the sky would unveil
          Until fnally I’d reached the top
          Then I would see
          Right in front of me
          I would see a majestic river of mountains
          Dipping
          Flowing
          Into the slowly setting sun
          Pen & Paper JUNE 2023 59
        
    60 JUNE 2023 Pen & Paper
        Coco Thomson
          Fruit of the Vine
          Digital photograph
          Grade 7
          
              
              
            
            Frond of Beauty
          Chipili Dumbwizi
          
          Grade 7
          Wind blows and takes your graciousness within Your beauty come in all diferent ways to express feeling for another
          Helping the fowers get it’s desired needs
          Swaying through the music of the wind
          Flying with the birds
          Showing your elegant beauty that I desire
          One day, rich with bliss
          Another day, old and complete
          All around the world
          Helping tree to tree fulfll their wishes
          To be beautiful and young again
          You give beauty to the fowers in lawns Or even backyards
          You cast your beauty at schools and parks
          That children try to get you because of your elegance and charm
          All your perfections in one
          That not a single thing could be undone
          Bless me with your beauty
          Then I would be in one
          Pen & Paper JUNE 2023 61
        Alegria Rojas
          River Mountains
          
    Digital photograph
          Grade 6
          62
        Pen
        Paper
        JUNE 2023
        &
        
              
              
            
            Twilight
          
    Pen & Paper JUNE 2023 63
        
              
              
            
            The Winter of Our Thirteenth Birthday
          Oola Breen-Ryan
          Grade 6
          In the winter of our thirteenth birthday, it was summer. November had come and gone, and we were halfway through December, but it hadn’t snowed once, and we were starting to get nervous. 75º in the winter wasn’t to be laughed at. The weather clearly wanted to be taken seriously, and nobody dared question her. But we questioned it anyway, and the question gnawed at our minds and our hearts until we were scared it would just destroy us from the inside out, so we tried to forget it, but nobody really did. We just pretended to, so we could act like everything was normal even though it wasn’t, even though not once had it snowed since last February, even though we had been waiting for a month for the cold to come and swirl around us and make us feel like, maybe, it was winter, not this neverending, confused summer.
          In the winter of our thirteenth birthday, the frst cold front came twenty two days into December, twenty two days longer than we’d hoped and wished for. The weather let her guard down, and all of our praying convinced the cold to come, and it came, in the dead of night, when nobody was awake, and the cold rustled through the rooms and the blankets. When we woke up, the ground was cold, and the air around us was like a knife when we snuck outside, still in our
          64 JUNE 2023 Pen & Paper
        pajamas, wondering if this was the cold that we had been waiting for, and it was, and it wound around us and made us shiver, and for a minute, we hated it so much we forgot it was what we had wanted for so long for. Then we ran inside, and grabbed books and blankets, and fully embraced the delayed winter. We wished it would last forever, but we knew it would only be here for so long, so we made hot chocolate and spice cookies and just spent hours staring out of the frosted glass.
          In the winter of our thirteenth birthday, it began to snow at exactly six-o-clock, just late enough that you would have to squint to see the snow, but it was there, and it quickly covered the ground, painted the world, dusted houses with powder, cast long, dark shadows into the night.
          In the winter of our thirteenth birthday, we smiled, and laughed, and you leaned out the window to try and catch snowfakes on your tongue, and, for a moment, everything seemed so perfectly cliche, the icy window, the cold seeping into the room, the crackling fre, and the snowfakes steadily falling outside.
          Pen & Paper JUNE 2023 65
        
              
              
            
            Ode to Blood
          Bryael Gonzalez
          
          Grade 7
          The slip of the paper
          The faring piece of skin
          Then comes out the drips
          One by one
          The deep scarlet colored liquid
          Flowing from tip of your skin
          In the air
          Then onto the cold hard foor
          In shock
          The special liquid
          still falling from the skin
          disconnected from its body
          Blood fowing from inside
          Attracts the dead
          A horror no one wants to appear
          The paper the one responsible
          For this dreaded “accident”
          Or was it...
          66 JUNE 2023 Pen & Paper
        
    Pen & Paper JUNE 2023 67
        Wil Falk
          Skelly
          Digital photograph Grade 8
          
              
              
            
            Untrodden Snow
          Eliza Raben Grade
          
          8
          Death is not a skeleton with scythe and robe, nor is it a lady in white or an endless tunnel or simple void. Death is a small child, all bundled up, hesitating on the front step.
          Their eyes scrunch up against the cold and bright, but stay open, because the snow is untrodden and it is beautiful. Can the child fnd it in them to take that frst step, feel the snow give beneath their boot? Because once they fnally do, they can’t go back, because there is a hole in the untrodden snow with commercial-brand boot treads at the bottom and a nimbus of kicked-up snow around it. So the child takes another step, slowly, forcing what should be muscle memory, and then it gets easier and they take another.
          What’s the metaphor, your teacher asks. Is it killing at war? Is it choosing to let the snow take you without struggle? Pick from the list or make it up, whatever gets you an A.
          No matter how carefully they tread, the child will leave a little mountain range behind them. Hills of snow clumps; footprint valleys. Is the child Death like the grim reaper is Death, or are they one of the reaped? Does it matter? For they are deep in the
          68 68 JUNE 2023 Pen & Paper
        snow now. And maybe the snow is Death, too.
          It may seem feeting in the slush and buds of March, distant in the splashing cerulean swimming pools of July, tantalizing in the dense oven air of August. But (or is it so?) the snow comes back. Delicately burning on your fngertips when you wait for your car after school, cradling you softly when you lie down and spread your arms to become an angel. Your lips turn blue. Light refracts of crystals too small for the eye to see properly. Bare trees creak.
          The human footprint moves slow and heavy and it crushes the untrodden snow. The blizzard flls it back in. The blizzard downs a power line.
          Frostbite turns the skin white before it turns it black, did you know that?
          Snow wafts in from under the door. A mother hands her child a coat and tells them to play outside. The child hesitates on the front step.
          Death is not as grand as the ministers and imams and rabbis say.
          Death is a child and a backyard of untrodden snow.
          Pen & Paper JUNE 2023 69
        Matteo Brebbia
          Shooting Palm Tree
          
    Digital photograph
          Grade 7
          70 JUNE 2023 Pen & Paper
        
              
              
            
            Much Much More
          Oola Breen-Ryan
          Grade 6
          Memories aren’t just memories.
          They’re glimpses into other people’s lives, hopes, dreams.
          They’re things to laugh about, cringe about, cry about.
          They’re moments that some would like to forget.
          They’re moments that others take pride in.
          They’re easy to bend, fracture, alter.
          They’re diferent from everyone’s perspective, as malleable as modeling clay.
          Memories aren’t just memories. They’re much, much more than that.
          Pen & Paper JUNE 2023 71
        Cronch
          Matteo Brebbia
          Grade 7
          Crunch
          The sound of snow under my feet
          Each fake slowly compressed, Leaving an imprint like no other
          Each step I take, Chills run up and down my body
          From my head to my feet
          Numbing my toes, Making me shiver
          Like a leaf in a light breeze
          Plonk
          Plonk
          The clatter of rocks across a frozen pond
          Sending spiderwebs of cracks racing across the smooth, icy surface
          Irreplaceably transforming it into Something new
          Something broken
          But stronger
          And more fascinating than ever
          Drip Drip Drip
          The symphony of tiny drops of water
          Dangling from icicles
          Holding on
          Until fnally their strength gives out
          72 JUNE 2023 Pen & Paper
        And they fall
          Plopping onto the rocks below But freezing back up Into an icy river
          Flowing down the rocks
          But never moving
          Transformed from one wonderful thing To another
          Each round in this season
          The Crunching
          The Plonking
          The Dripping
          The Plopping
          So diferent, so unique Like snowfakes
          Like people
          Each with their own story to tell Something twisted and gnarled, But beautiful and intricate at the same time This is winter
          A wonderland of blurring white
          A unique, frozen, frosty expanse of freedom. Each piece forming a complex mosaic of sounds
          Sights
          Sensations and most importantly, Stories.
          Pen & Paper JUNE 2023 73
        
              
              
            
            Ode to the Murkey Water on Weston Street
          Coco Thomson
          Grade 7
          I fnd you when I needed you
          Perfectly black
          Like the dark sky at midnight
          
    I dragged her into the water
          Her body pale as the moon
          Her skin becoming pink from the cold
          My Nike sneakers soaked
          Your water curdling my skin with its icy embrace
          But she is perfectly preserved
          I grab the rope out of my truck
          And a stone from your prized collection
          And wrap it around her frail body
          I watch as you devour her
          And sink into her perfect skin
          Leaving me in tears
          You collect them and drown them out
          Leaving me happy
          As she resurfaces
          I see the claw marks and cuts
          I tie my shoes and leave you
          My truck doesn’t start
          So I crawl back to you
          Red and blue lights fashing behind me
          And I to sink slowly into your grasp
          My love and I never apart
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        2023 Pen & Paper
        
    Pen & Paper JUNE 2023 75
        Raleigh Simmonds Moonglow Digital illustration
        Grade 8
        
              
              
            
            Running
          Virginia Murphy Grade 7
          
          I’m running, running as fast as I can but it keeps getting closer and closer. I feel a cold sharp pain in my throat, making it harder to breathe every step of the way. They are not going to stop. My legs ache but I still fnd myself running across the bridge and over the hill. Then there is the house. I feel my body moving towards it. My heart is pounding out of my chest as I back into the wall. and then there it is, every step getting closer and closer.
          “Sweetie, wake up,” I hear my mom holler.
          As I sit up in bed, I replay the nightmare I just had. It was so strange and so real. I walk over to open the window and open it, welcoming the aroma of pumpkins and apple cider. I stick my head out the window to see if my best friend, Katie, is awake yet.
          “Katie!”
          I stand there for a moment waiting for her to reply. Nothing. Strange. I look down the street to see if she is on a walk. I feel a harsh breeze past my face then I see someone walking down the road. They are pacing back and forth back and forth. It seems like they know I was looking at them because they stop and look up. As they look up I feel my heart begin to race so I sprint down stairs yelling my moms name!
          “MOM! MOM! THERE IS SOMEONE ON THE STREET WATCHING ME!”
          76 JUNE 2023 Pen & Paper
        “Sweetie, calm down. Let’s go and look,” she says calmly. While we walk outside I hide behind my mom, grabbing her sweater every step of the way. I point to where the person was but no one is there.
          “Wait, but they were right there...” I say as I look down the street. But still there is no one in sight.
          “I told you to stop watching those scary movies, Lola! Now you are imagining things!” she scolds.
          “I swear there was someone there! Please believe me!”
          As my mom walks back inside, I sit outside for a minute thinking about what I saw and how it disappeared as soon as we came outside. I turn around to walk back inside when I hear a loud bang. I spin around as fast as I can and I see the door is wide open.
          Weird. I remember closing that.
          I walk inside, trying to forget what just happened. All day I await a call from Katie but it never comes. After two hours of waiting I decide that I’m just going to walk over and see if she can hangout. As I walk over I feel someone’s eyes watching me. Trying to not look suspicious, I begin to run. As soon as I get to Katie’s doorstep I press the doorbell. No response. I try knocking, no response. Then fnally after 5 minutes of waiting I see someone walking in my direction, Katie’s mom.
          “Hi!” I say “Is Katie here?”
          “She is no longer here,” she says, her eyes looking out into the distance with a sharp, knife-like, stare. I turn around trying to see what she is looking at but no one is there. While turning back around the sky gets dark and a large, dark, cloud
          Pen & Paper JUNE 2023 77
        consumes the sky.
          I look back at Katie’s mom, but she is gone.
          Maybe she went inside, I tell myself. But then I feel a cold wind.
          I turn and see that they are there. Standing. Waiting. I stife the scream bubbling up in my throat as I begin to run. They are right behind me.
          I run.
          I run for miles.
          At one point, a runner’s stitch forming in my side, I look behind me, sure that they must be gone by now. But then there they are. Gaining on me. Relentless.
          I swallow the pain and continue running, running as fast as I can. But they keep getting closer. Closer.
          I feel a sharp burn in my throat, a metallic taste in my mouth. With every step I take, it is harder and harder to breathe. But I keep going because they are not going to stop.
          As I run across a bridge, the continue to gain ground on me. Closer. Closer.
          I see a house and run inside, throwing the door shut behind me and trying to catch my breath. I look around, searching for something to bar the door.
          As I do, I notice that somehow this house feels familiar. So familiar, like I have been there before. But before I can complete that thought, pull the memory to the forefront of my mind, the handle of the door turns and long fngers curl around the door, reaching in, reaching towards me.
          Closer.
          And closer.
          78 JUNE 2023 Pen & Paper
        
              
              
            
            thoughts
          Noah Kurzenberger Grade 8
          
          maybe it was the way i smiled the way i always seem to cover my mouth all when laughter breaks free
          maybe it’s my style the baggy clothes i pile on my fgure covering up everything i don’t want to see
          maybe it’s the way my mouth zips shut if i speak the thoughts i’ll never put into words may they one day come out if i ever try
          maybe it was the way you looked at me the way your eyes lit up when i ran past or maybe it was just my imagination a tool far too grand
          maybe it was her or maybe nothing we see but what if it was possible to be content being me?
          Pen & Paper JUNE 2023 79
        
              
              
            
            Moving On
          Kaitlyn Mesiya Grade 5
          
          The trees frozen and unmoving as their tears fall one by one from the branches
          
    All the feelings frozen in time until the frst glimpse of sun warms them
          The ice melting and falling into the bare ground
          Days and weeks go by with the slow falling of icy tears
          Until fnally,
          The sun emerges through the gray sky warming the earth
          Single blades of green grass,
          The frst signs of spring appear
          In weeks the stems of fowers will force themselves to push through the frozen ground
          Once they can see the sun’s bright light
          Blossoming, growing, blooming
          The fragile petals open cautiously to reveal their inner beauty. The joys of spring will return once again.
          80 JUNE 2023 Pen & Paper
        Matteo Brebbia
          Phantom Stranger
          
    Digital photograph
          Grade 7
          Pen & Paper JUNE 2023 81
        
              
              
            
            Alone
          Oola Breen-Ryan Grade 6
          
          October 13th, 8:00 AM, 1993
          Janet woke with a start. She had a pounding headache, and absolutely no recollection of where or who she was.
          She’d been having a gymnastics dream. She was about to land her front handspring, but her body twisted at the wrong moment and she came crashing down.
          An advil, along with a glass of water, sat on her bedside table. She gratefully took it, cringing in pain.
          She walked down the stairs. “Mom?” she called out. No answer, but Janet wasn’t worried. Her parents slept in all the time.
          Janet groggily opened the fridge and reached for the milk. Her hand closed around empty air. Sighing, she headed upstairs to her parents bedroom. “We’re out of––” she started to say, but froze. Her mom and dad weren’t in there, either.
          Janet checked all the bathrooms, the laundry room, her bedroom, their dining room, the living room, but to no avail. Her parents were no longer in the house.
          She rushed out the door. There was nobody on the street, or in the storefronts, even though the glowing neon signs said “Open”. And although it was Sunday morning, no music came from the church.
          The highway next to their town was deserted, too, which was especially strange. Cars were always speeding along it. Except for today, apparently.
          Janet began to panic. “Mom! Dad!” she yelled, fghting back tears. “Where are you?”
          Her headache was slowly worsening to a migraine. She felt dizzy and nauseous.
          She had never felt so alone.
          82 JUNE 2023 Pen & Paper
        October 13th, 8:00 AM, 1993
          Mrs. Flywell took a sip of her cofee. It was bitter, like a bad omen.
          “So let’s discuss––” Mr. Flywell’s sentence was cut of by Janet running down the stairs.
          “Mom?” she called.
          “Good morning, sweetie,” Mrs. Flywell said, but Janet stared through her, like she was a ghost. Mr. and Mrs. Flywell exchanged a glance.
          “It’s probably nothing, said Mr. Flywell.
          Nowadays, when tourists visit the town of Oakridge, they always keep their necks craned and their cameras ready, in hopes that they will see the woman that wanders around the town like she can’t see anybody, the woman that sufered from an untreated gymnastics concussion thirty years ago, the woman who still hasn’t recovered.
          Pen & Paper JUNE 2023 83
        
              
              
            
            weeping willows
          Noah Kurzenberger Grade 8
          
          your spectral remnants linger so quietly the graceful dance devoid of greed a one not seeming the lying kind one shameful mind i fnally read
          all those words you’ve never said that same warm smile across your face desecrating to all we meant to be
          your litany of lies collapse in my arms the grasp swiftly loosens as once I break free falling i am, beginning to sink waning away with every shy blink drowning in this longing endless sea only you can help me breathe
          as i run from this moonlight your thoughts pierce my skin
          the lights of this world begin to dim the end appearing to be just you and me your hand in my hand as we fnally fee
          84 JUNE 2023 Pen & Paper
        
    Pen & Paper JUNE 2023 85
        Piper Carillo-Foote Misty Lamp
          Digital photograph Grade 7
          
              
              
            
            Through The Years
          Virginia Murphy Grade 7
          
          Year one, First steps
          First words
          First time hearing the words no No worries at all
          Year fve, First real friend
          First memory
          First time going to the beach
          Only worried about what barbie I got
          Year ten, First friend to leave
          First crush
          First time feeling left out Worried about my soccer game
          Year ffteen, First love
          First heartbreak
          First time losing someone Worried about my body
          Year twenty, First wedding
          First kid
          First time getting a real job Worried about money
          86 JUNE 2023 Pen & Paper
        Year thirty, First twins
          First regrets
          First time cheering in the stands for my kids
          Worried about the bills
          Year forty, First kid graduating high school
          First kid in college
          First gray hair
          Worried about my kids
          Year ffty, First vow renewal
          First published book
          First time being called grandma
          Worried about my family
          Year sixty, First retirement party
          First back pain
          First time without parents
          Worried about life without them
          Year seventy, First funeral hosted
          First heart attack
          First time alone
          Worried about dying
          Year eighty, Last laugh
          Last hug with my kids
          Last time feeling loved
          Worried about my time left...
          Pen & Paper JUNE 2023 87
        Matteo Brebbia
          Stardust
          
    Digital photograph
          Grade 7
          88 JUNE 2023 Pen & Paper
        
              
              
            
            My Endless Sea of Song
          Wil Falk
          Grade 8
          Slashing like a graceful petal
          Gliding through a path of trees
          Watching as the wind go fying
          Rocking me so violently.
          Crying for a note of song
          As a strum is struck by bounds
          The cries now start to quiet down
          Here’s an endless sea of sounds.
          No longer will the wind like thunder
          Try and hold me any longer
          Trapped inside my songless prison
          Though now my Eyes have found their light
          Trough dark and stormy nights
          Now my harmony is free
          Wind is Singing my melody
          Plucking the strings of song
          My freedom does now belong
          In my endless sea of song
          Pen & Paper JUNE 2023 89
        
    90 JUNE 2023 Pen & Paper
        Digital photographs
          
    Grade 6
          
    Pen & Paper JUNE 2023 91
        Oola Breen-Ryan Vignettes
          
              
              
            
            A Sound in the Night
          Matteo Brebbia Grade 7
          
          I jump up from my bed when I hear a loud crash. Then a creeeeek. My heart begins to thump in my chest, because I know my parents are never up at this hour. I slowly slip out of bed and put on some clothes. The noisy foorboards of my creaky, rustic Salem house are as old as time itself, and unless you constantly wipe down every surface, there is always a thick layer of dust wherever you put your hand. As I tiptoe out of the door, I hear a small, soft cackle, coming from below me on the frst foor. The laugh of a cold hoarse voice. Whispery. Quiet. Bone-chillingly cold. It sends a shiver down my spine and my breathing becomes shallow and quick. My clammy hands are white with efort as I grip the railing for the stairs. I walk down slowly. Step. By step. By step.
          At the bottom, I quickly fnd something to hide behind. Afraid someone, or something will jump out at me any second. Beads of cold sweat drip down my back. They feel like getting pricked by an icicle. Something is defnitely wrong. I don’t know what. I’ve heard all the stories from the past. Telling the history of our town. The Salem witch trials. Witches being burned at the stake. But those witches weren’t real, were they? They couldn’t be, but I’m not so sure. My brain feels like it has been enveloped in a fog. Just like the
          92
        92 JUNE 2023 Pen & Paper
        fog that blurs the full moon outside my window. A wolf howls at the moon. I jump with fear, accidentally knocking the closet full of china plates that I am hiding behind. They clatter, making a noise that, in the silence of my sleeping house, sounds like a building falling down. It’s glass windows shattering into a million pieces. I pray that whatever is lurking in the shadows can’t hear the plates. Walking carefully, I leave my hiding place and venture further into the thick darkness, hoping with all my might that this is just a nightmare that I will wake from in the morning. More noises seem to be coming from behind the door to the basement. The hairs on my neck stand up, and ever so slowly I creep towards the door. One fnal step and I am at the threshold, my hand poised to turn the handle. Before I can however, the door opens on its own, creaking as it does so. I look down the stairway. Suddenly, a hand appears from the shadows. The skin on it tight. Its nails long, black, and curved. I know it is human, but it looks more like a claw. Its fngers crooked and gnarled. I try to scream, loud enough to pierce the veil of silence, but the hand covers my mouth, stifing my desperate call for help. It couldn’t possibly be alive, it is so frigid on my skin. I try to run, but it is too late. My last thoughts are of my happy family that will be broken up by my death, before I am pulled down, deep into the darkness.
          Never to be seen again.
          Pen & Paper JUNE 2023 93
        
              
              
            
            Vibrant Waves
          Raleigh Simmonds
          
          Grade 8
          Vibrant waves of warmth (dance) across the room
          Heating the space set to welcome
          Contrast sending shivers down the body
          Sudden cracks fll the silence
          A fourish as it is moved or rekindled
          Up into the ambiance they go melting into it all
          Heat burning the nose with fragrance
          Warm dry scents
          Scents of the putrescent lumber used to stoke open fame
          A stunning array of hues envelops
          Breathing (beauty) into the comparatively bleak expanse
          Flames fade out fawlessly from the core
          Deep breath in Smoke out
          Leaving a stinging sensation unlike many
          94 JUNE 2023 Pen & Paper
        
    Pen & Paper JUNE 2023 95
        Matteo Brebbia Flame
          Digital photograph
          Grade 7
          Kirk Ships in the Night
          Oil on canvas
          Grade 5
          
    96 JUNE 2023 Pen & Paper
        Ashlee
          
    Pen & Paper JUNE 2023 97
        
              
              
            
            the warm smoke of cigarettes
          Noah Kurzenberger Grade 8
          
          Every night was the same.
          At 5 o’clock sharp, she’d step out on the patio. The door was closed gently, and I could see a blurred image through the battered glass. It would take a couple minutes before she stepped inside again, the same monotone look on her face every time.
          I didn’t notice at frst. It took a few days before I smelled the lingering smoke as she walked through the home, pacing from the kitchen to the den. When she came close, a faint, smoggy sigh escaped through her smile.
          “I’m okay,” she’d assure me. “I just need a breath of fresh air. On warm days, she’d go when the sun began to set. I could almost see the colors of the sky bounce of her skin, pinks of oranges and yellows in blues. I’d peer through the glass, waiting like an attention-starved puppy for her return. Minutes would pass, but it seemed like hours in my head. At times, I had a short fuse for her evening rituals.
          “Lune,” I’d say. “It’s time for you to come inside.”
          The smokey scent on her cardigan only strengthened with time. I grew worried, biting my nails when the door shut.
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        98 JUNE 2023 Pen & Paper
        “Don’t worry about me,” she’d plead. “I’m doing just fne.”
          I knew it was a lie. If I pressed my ear to the wall, I could hear mufed sobs escaping from the other side. The bags under her eyes grew darker with each evening, her fgure now frail. How could she be doing just fne? It bafed me every time.
          On that fateful day, I followed her outside. She seemed startled when her gaze met mine, finching like I was a stranger. Her eyes were duller than the night sky, looking lifeless in the porch light.
          I tried to speak, but no words came out. I tried to move, but my body did not comply. All at once she began to fall, her soft, brown hair blanketing the foor. Her eyes slowly shut, mine quickly following. As the darkness took over, I knew what had been done.
          I lost her; and I had lost myself too.
          Pen & Paper JUNE 2023 99
        Lynx
          Chalk illustration
          Grade 5
          
    100 JUNE 2023 Pen & Paper
        Ashlee Kirk
          
              
              
            
            The Pause
          Matteo Brebbia Grade 7
          
          The day fies by The bustling and rushing of all your activities numbing the brain
          It’s exhausting, running around wildly
          Never taking a pause to think or settle the mind
          Because sometimes, that’s all we need.
          A pause.
          A tiny stop in time.
          The moment between when you inhale and exhale, Or the little stall that happens just after you swing up on a swing,
          But just before you come back down to Earth.
          Breathing.
          Swinging.
          These are continuous motions.
          The up and down movement of the swing. The in and out movement of breath.
          But they are all broken only by the pause.
          A busy day is a continuous motion, too.
          But the diference is that there is no pause, Nothing to break up the work, No chance to calm yourself, Without the pause you just get pushed around Like a leaf on the wind.
          The day needs a pause.
          The swing needs a pause.
          The breath needs a pause.
          Everything Needs a pause.
          Pen & Paper JUNE 2023 101
        
              
              
            
            Doomscrolling Oola Breen-Ryan Grade 6
          She was doomscrolling when it happened, when it was announced that the Earth wasn’t safe for humans anymore. She had been looking through countless articles about relationship issues, about how she and her husband’s marriage wasn’t going to work out. But, when the radio crackled and the announcers explained that everyone would have to enjoy the last three days of their lives, she realized that there were bigger issues on her hands. The reporter said that landflls had killed the fsh and other sources of meat. How many things did she throw away that she could have reused? How many items of clothing did she wear once or twice, then get rid of? Could she have recycled more? Pollution had seeped into the ground and made any plants inedible, the reporter explained. Smoke made the air unbreathable. The water, once clear and drinkable, was flled with trash, gasoline from tourist boats, and microplastics. Even when fltered, fresh water was too polluted to be drunk. Animals had been dying because of climate change for decades, and now humans were, too. She thought about the air she was inhaling right now. Was it safe? Or were pollutants entering her lungs? Her thoughts few to her family, her two daughters. Would her kids cry? She regretted every minute that she hadn’t spent with them. And what about her husband? She glanced once more at the ffteen tabs open on her phone and felt her heart sink. Her marriage was the least she had to worry about. She loved her husband. How had she not fully comprehended that before?
          Slowly, she let her phone fall out of her hand. It crashed onto the foor, sending a million cracks through the screen like a spiderweb. The last thing she saw before it shut down was the date.
          102 JUNE 2023 Pen & Paper
        
    Pen & Paper JUNE 2023 103
        Raleigh Simmonds
          Profle
          Digital illustration
          Grade 8
          
    104 JUNE 2023 Pen & Paper
        Eddie Musser
          Actress with a Malleable Face
          Digital illustration
          Grade 8
          Noah Kurzenberger Grade 8
          
          the blush flls my face as i gaze into the glass the glare blinds my skin a face peering back while i sit here and weep your strange face remains staring back at me with that same sorrow gaze
          “how could you?”
          i ask receiving no answer
          “why would you?”
          i add tears creeping closer the mirror stares back and suddenly i am nothing just a body on the earth spinning but never stunning as the sun keeps shining in this cruel, broken world
          i stare into the mirror longing for your return
          Pen & Paper JUNE 2023 105
        mirror
        Tree
          Ethan Kirk
          Grade 8
          Standing alone, Shining down, On two trees, Branches out.
          In the middle of a barren land, Many branches illuminated. Casting an ominous shadow, On the wet land below.
          The lamp post standing tall, Like a slender tree, An outcast, Surrounded by outcasts.
          The only illumination in the land, Shines upon two trees, As they stand, In the middle of the sea.
          106 JUNE 2023 Pen & Paper
        
    Pen & Paper JUNE 2023 107
        Wil
          Falk it’s just a phase Digital illustration
        Grade 8
          
    
    108 JUNE 2023 Pen & Paper
        Anson Pitts Life Short flm Grade 7
        Wood, digital photos, acrylic, lucite
          
    
    Pen & Paper JUNE 2023 109
        Perspectiva
        Mateo Rojas Perspective |
        Grade 8
        Mason Gray
          Breaking Free Clay, acrylic Grade 7
          
    110 JUNE 2023 Pen & Paper
        
    
    Pen & Paper JUNE 2023 111
        
    
    112 JUNE 2023 Pen & Paper
        Raleigh Simmonds
          One More Sip
          Glass, wood, wire, acrylic
          Grade 8
          
    
    Pen & Paper JUNE 2023 113
        Julia Broder Unlocking Their Future Wood, digital photos, acrylic, parchment Grade 8
          
    
    114 JUNE 2023 Pen & Paper
        Bryael Gonzalez
          The New School Uniform
          Refective vest, school supplies, acrylic paint Grade 7
          
    
    Pen & Paper JUNE 2023 115
        Welcome to Kindergarten! Backpack, school supplies, acrylic, string, paper
        7
        Michael Toolan
          Grade
        
    
    116 JUNE 2023 Pen & Paper
        
    Pen & Paper JUNE 2023 117
        Virginia Murphy
          Ghosts of the Classroom
          Wood, acrylic Grade 7
          Digital
          
    
    118 JUNE 2023 Pen & Paper
        Noah Kurzenberger 34
          images, acrylic Grade 8
          Coco Thomson
          Do You Like What You See?
          
    Cardboard, acrylic, tinfoil
          Grade 7
          
    Pen & Paper JUNE 2023 119
        Ava Sylvestro
          Caged Fear
          Birdcage, clay, acrylic, fshing wire
          
    Grade 7
          
    120 JUNE 2023 Pen & Paper
        Tanyse Floyd
          Why Can’t I Be Like Them?
          Digital images, acrylic, string, pins
          
    Grade 8
          
    Pen & Paper JUNE 2023 121
        Fabric, digital collage, iron-on transfer Grade 8
          
    122 JUNE 2023 Pen & Paper
        Teddy Kushel
          The Communities Behind the Courts
          
    
    Pen & Paper JUNE 2023 123
        Ty Srihari
          Flower Fission
          Wood, artifcial fowers
          
    Grade 8
          
    124 JUNE 2023 Pen & Paper
        
    
    Pen & Paper JUNE 2023 125
        Eddie Musser For Your Pleasure
          Wood, acrylic, paper, wire, screws
          Grade 8
          Ethan Kirk
          Record Breaking
          Digital images, wood, acrylic
          
    Grade 8
          
    126 JUNE 2023 Pen & Paper
        Grade 7
          
    
    Pen & Paper JUNE 2023 127
        Emily Toolan Poverty’s Uneven Plates Clay, paper plate, cardboard, acrylic, digital images
          Chipili Dumbwizi
          Typical Refection
          Glass vases, artifcial fowers, acrylic, digital images, lights
          Grade 7
          
    128 JUNE 2023 Pen & Paper
        
    
    Pen & Paper JUNE 2023 129
        This year’s edition of Pen & Paper, “New Horizons,” is organized around the themes inherent in these vistas: change and transition, beginnings and endings, aspirations and dreams, etc. The intent throughout the magazine is to ofer commentary and insight into these areas through the artwork, poetry, short stories, and photography of our middle school students. Each section begins with a thematic heading and a full-page photograph.
          The digital fle of this edition was created on a MacBook Pro using Adobe InDesign 2022. Spreads and the layout were designed using Adobe InDesign 2022. The font used is Iowan Old Style. llustrations were scanned using a Sharp MX-4070 scanner. Pen & Paper is printed on sixty-pound white bond and the cover is printed on 100# stock.
          A special thank you to Gary Boros of Signworks Studios in New Milford, CT for his professionalism, promptness, and precision in printing our editions each year.
          The Unquowa School is Pen & Paper’s home base. Unquowa is a progressive, independent, Pre-K4 through 8th Grade school located in Fairfeld, Connecticut. There are 152 enrolled students in total (92 in the Upper School, Grades 5-8) and 45 faculty and staf members. The contributors to Pen & Paper, ranging from 5th through 8th grade, make the fnal production of the magazine possible through their serious dedication and talent. Each year, 7th and 8th Grade teachers encourage writers, editors, and artists to join the Pen & Paper staf, where they engage in the creative process of producing the magazine from start to fnish.
          Previous editions of Pen & Paper earned the following awards:
          Columbia Scholastic Press Association (CSPA)
          Gold and Silver Crown Awards
          Gold Circle Awards
          American Scholastic Press Association (ASA)
          First Place with Special Merit Award
          Most Outstanding Middle School Literary-Art Magazine Award
          130 JUNE 2023 Pen & Paper