Wednesday, September 7, 2011

Winners July 2011

The Theme: You Are Here

The Winners:

Film:

Title : You Are Here


By: Pollyanna Leung
Age: 14
Irvine University Park Library


Art:

Title : One of the Many Beautiful Flowers in La Habra




By: Ofelia Sanchez
Age: 14
La Habra Library
Poetry:

In Lovely Rain

We march down the tunnel
Overrun with joy
Our team flies down the field like hawks
Talons curled
We jump to our feet
There is a sudden silence
My heart is in a coil
First down
We explode like happy cannons
Silence
#21 fumbles the ball.  Again.
Our adversaries behind us erupt
We bury our faces in our hands
It starts to rain
The churro man comes
He knows he is our hero
And now we have
Hot cinnamon churro in cold wet hands
I am drenched
In lovely rain

Artist Statement :
This poem is about time spent with my dad at USC Football games.  The stadium, during a game, is one of my favorite places.  It is a place to bond, laugh and enjoy a perfect day...even in lovely rain!

By: Carter Jenkins
Age: 14
San Juan Capistrano


Prose:


Title: The Flower of Sharon

I pick up the red phone in the vice principal’s office.
“I’m coming to pick you up at school now because we’re going to go see grandpa at the hospital so ...”
“What! Mom, is something wrong with Grandpa?”
“Well . . . I’ll explain to you in the car. Wait in front of the maple tree!”
“…”
            A cold shiver goes down my spine. It’s July 20. In one week, Grandpa turns 78. He will celebrate the tenth anniversary of his diagnosis with Alzheimer’s disease. He will not recognize any of my family’s faces, not even mine, but he will celebrate it just the same. And we will hold back our tears and put on our happy faces, just the way we have done for the past nine years.
            I walk down the crimson hallway to grab my bag. I forget my habit of counting each cracked brick in the gray pathway or fingering broken locks dangling from age-worn lockers. Today, there are just too many.

“I have to go to the hospital.”
Tears swell in my eyes as I interrupt class to speak to Mr.Walton.
“I’ll be missing the rest of school because . . .”
            I blur the end of my sentence but something tells me he understands. 40 pairs of dry eyes stare at my pair of red, blurry eyes as I throw history textbooks in my bag. The silence is suffocating and I half-run out of the room, tears dropping on the threadbare carpet. Class resumes immediately.
                        *                                  *                                  *
            I run past the chipped staircase next to the theater. Two posters hanging behind the theater yell, “Come watch Alice in Wonderland at Woodbridge! A show you’ll never forget for the rest of your life!” Alice in Wonderland. The first play Grandpa ever came to watch me star in. It was only the beginning of his Alzheimer’s and he only forgot simple things like car keys and phone numbers. I remember playing the ten of Diamonds in Kindergarten and forgetting my only line “Why of course my Majesty!” and Grandpa chuckling. It wasn’t a mean laugh; it was a beautiful ho-ho-ho that made you feel better about forgetting your only line and having several hundred parents sneering at you. And he gave me ten roses after my performance-“ten beauties for the ten of diamonds, cutey.” I wonder if he will ever forget that play for the rest of his life.

            I dash in front of the science building, past the vending machine that sells Cheez-its, Goldfish, Cheetos, and apple-flavored chips. It’s the only vending machine at school that sells apple-flavored chips. A childhood temptation crosses my mind. About as chewy, sweet, and pink as temptation can get, animal cracker after animal cracker endangered my nutritious diet in second grade. When Mom forgot to pack lunch before she left, ‘guess I’ll just have some more of these’ and when Dad came home with no dinner, ‘once again, animal crackers save the day’.
            And then Grandpa started cutting green apples in the shape of animal crackers. I don’t know how he did it because it was the third year of his disease and he was starting to forget how to stop his Toyota at red lights and how to read fairy tales to my sister and me at bedtime. But he cut those apples into such thin slices of strange, exotic animals, ones he called ‘zebrelephants’ and ‘rhinostriches’, that I had to try at least two. And then three. And then twenty. And by the time I craved animal crackers again, there were too many different animals that I had to try, and strangely, they all tasted much more delicious.
            Quarter in, chips out. I stuff apple chips into my backpack, hoping maybe he’ll remember me now, just maybe.

            The hundred year-old maple tree stands next to Greg Cops Street, named after the first principal at Woodbridge High. When Grandpa and I lived next to the “big red school that someday you’ll go to, cutey”, our childhood games often revolved around that majestic tree. There was Arirang, a Korean version of the game green-light-red-light, where a Chanter would sing a short song facing a large tree and turn around immediately to catch anyone who was not frozen still. But when the Chanter was singing, everyone else would sprint to touch the maple tree first and win. If you fell, or even twitched your pinky after each song, a mean Chanter could always call you out. Grandpa was a very mean Chanter.
            Until one day when he stood facing the maple tree and started singing “The flower of Sharon is . . . the flower of Sharon is” and kept repeating the line when five of my fifth grade friends and I stood desperate for him to finish the verse so one of us could tag the tree and win. Finally, sticky sweat dripping and stinging my eyes under the scorching sun, I ran up to him, ignoring the stifled giggling of my friends.
“I don’t remember the song, cutey. I don’t remember what comes after ‘the flower of Sharon is’. I used to know this, cutey, I used to.”
“Grandpa, why can’t you just sing the song? I just wanted to have some fun with my closest friends and you can’t remember two lines!”
“Was it ‘the flower of Sharon is withering’? No, I think it was ‘drooping’? Am I right, cutey?”
“Grandpa, why can’t you just sing the stupid song?”
            Then, I did something I regret until today. I started sobbing loudly to ‘punish’ my inconsiderate Grandpa who had damaged my preteen reputation in front of my friends. Of course I knew why he could not finish the Arirang song. He was entering his sixth year of Alzheimer’s and losing his memory so quickly like a cascade of snapshots pouring out of his mind. I could no longer expect him to remember our house number or even the lyrics his favorite song. But at least for that moment, I wanted to be a normal girl with a Grandpa who mostly remembered things, not one with a Grandpa who rarely remembered anything.
            My embarrassment escaped when my startled friends muttered good-byes and headed home but even years after, my guilt from watching Grandpa apologize too many times that day and seeing him struggle to remember the last words of the song has scarred my heart, a punishment I wholly deserve.
                        *                                  *                                  *
“Your eyes are red,” is the first thing my sister says to me when I ride my mom’s car in front of the maple tree. “Did you cry? What a crybaby.”
Her words only bounce off my ears and I hastily wipe off some tears.
“Mom, what’s wrong with Grandpa? Is he having problems with medication? Is he getting surgery today? Is he all cured now and . . .”
“Grandpa’s lung is faltering and the doctors are worrying he’ll be gone in a day or two.”
She spits out the sentence like a cobra stabbing venom into its prey. Dark red poison penetrates my skin and strangles my heart.
“Does that mean . . . will grandpa . . . but it’s only been ten years . . . that’s not really going to happen, right Mom?”
“I don’t know but I hope not, honey. I’m praying and praying.”

            Mom drops us off in front of the hospital to go park and my sister and I run across the scarlet-colored corridor to a room sporting a sign that reads Grandpa’s name: Kim Ki-Yong. Grandpa is tucked under a soft white blanket my relatives have brought and his bewildered eyes are blood shot and lifeless as they stare into open space. Aunts and uncles dressed in traditional, black hanbok crowd his bed holding hands and praying. Grandma is clutching tissues soaked with mascara-stained tears but more tears run down her wrinkled peach-color skin, dropping on to Grandpa’s snowy blanket.
            I tiptoe into the silent room. My hands are quivering as I approach the bed, a bag of apple-flavored chips clenched in my left fist. An inconsistent beep-beep-beep is coming from the stethograph connected to Grandpa’s emaciated wrist. I squirm between my relatives to the front of the bed and the rustle of my bag of chips attracts Grandpa’s weary eyes.

“You are here,” Grandpa murmurs. “You are here to play with me.”
“Yes, I am. Grandpa, can you tell who I am?” I wave the rose-colored bag of chips in front of his face. The nostalgic scent of apple hovers in the air. “Do you remember when you cut apples into animal shapes for me when I was in second grade and when you sang the ‘flower of Sharon’ song and I got so mad at you and I’m so sorry for yelling at you when it wasn’t your fault. Please don’t die, Grandpa, please don’t die.”
“You are here,” Grandpa repeats.
He’s not looking at me and I realize he doesn’t recognize who I am. He doesn’t recognize any of us. The bag of apple chips falls to the floor and bursts.

The stethograph starts blinking uncontrollably as the beep-beep-beep sound slows.
“No, Grandpa, you were wrong.” His blurry eyes meet mine but I am no longer crying. “The flower of Sharon is not withering. It’s blooming.”
Trying to ignore the darkening stethograph and Grandpa’s heavy eyes, I start to sing.
“The flower of Sharon is in full bloom.” Grandma, with one hand resting on my shoulder, joins in. “Summer is here and the lilacs and lilies are flowering at last! What a beautiful sunny day!”
The song ends in a high note. And with a final shrill ‘BEEP’, Grandpa succumbs to the forces of nature on a sunny day, his five fingers tightly wrapped around mine.

‘Good bye, Grandpa. You are always here in my heart.’

Artist Statement :
Anyone who has lost a loved one knows how difficult it is to cope with the loss, even after time has passes. The last week of July marked one year since my grandfather passed away in 2010. I will never forget how much he loved me, and he will always be here in my heart.
By: Hoyeon Lee
Age : 15
Irvine Heritage Park Library







Honorable Mentions:


Poetry:

A Different Orange County
In Orange County, we all live together
whether black, asian, hispanic, or white
we all share California's hot weather.
However, as a community we do not ignite
harmony, understanding, compassion or love.

Let this be the time for when we can begin
the harmony, let's commence the love
Let's begin a new chapter, let's win
the world's attention by being one of
                        a kind.

Let’s ignite a change in Orange County.

Artist Statement :
I was born in Anaheim and moved to Mexico for four years. When I came back, learning English was tough and on the road to my success, I was discriminated many times. Now, as a senior in High School, I still encounter discrimination on a daily bases, and I know it is time for Orange County to change. 

By: Christopher Jimenez
Age: 12
Anaheim


You are here
You are here,
A leaf in the endless tree of time
An atom borrowed from the dinosaurs,
Another borrowed from the wind.

We live and die in a season
Like a leaf that buds in spring and shrivels in winter
Like a candle lit for a birthday cake
Alive only for a breath of time

Most leaves fall and are forgotten
Only a few preserved in the history book of time
How is it that these people were remembered?
They stood up while others sat down
They charged the sky with swords
They devoured discomfort
For it is only when we are challenged that we grow

And so you are here.
What will you do about it?

Artist Statement :
"You are here." We are always here, part of the earth, but only for a breath of time do the elements conglomerate to form us, then are scattered again. So while we are alive, we should make the most out of our lives.

By: Tony Zeng
Age: 12
Irvine

Prose:

Title: Tomato Days

The leaves of the oak tree rustled as my mother pushed aside a branch and surveyed the tomato fields. They lay about one hundred paces away, at the bottom of the hill. The hot summer had turned the long grass on the hill yellow, forcing my mother and her friends to strip down to collared t-shirts and shorts, and pushing the boys from other towns far away to come all the way to the shallow river and deep reservoir into which it flowed.  A few minutes ago, those boys had been splashing in the reservoir, their voices echoing off the tiny dam. Now, they were on their way home; walking past the acres of vegetable fields, climbing the craggy mountains that girdled my mother’s little village of ten families, so small that it didn’t even have a name.
My mother’s village rested on a hill that was cut in half by a dirt road. On either side stood several stout one-story brick houses, in the center of which was a small community garden.  As my mother sat in a willow tree bordering the vegetable fields, everyone else in the village took their afternoon nap. Everything stood still and silent in the reservoir except for the song of the swallow and the whispering of the warm breeze.
Four friends peeked out of the tree with my mother; two boys and two girls who, like my mother, were 9 years old. They giggled and smiled, delighted to disobey their parents by not taking their naps, and stealing out to solve this mystery. But what was the mystery?
Seeing nothing, they hid their heads and continued playing finger games and folding paper airplanes while one boy kept watch. It did not take long until he saw something. He whispered to everyone, and they peeked out. Something rustled in the grass. What was it? Could it be a fox?
No, it was not. As my mother peered between the branches of the willow tree, she could make out six naked boys, from wee little ones to teenagers, all sun-tanned and dripping wet from the reservoir. They crept up to my mother’s tomato fields.
At ten paces away from the field, a damp head popped out of the long, yellow grass. Not spotting any danger, the boy jumped out with glee, then threw away his stealth. Like frogs, the rest sprang up too and lumbered noisily over to the tomato fields—shouting to each other, giggling, and scaring even the crows. Eeew! My mother and her friends could not help but snort and giggle at the sight of these naked, dripping wet, sun-tanned boys.  Even though my mother tried to turn her head away, she could only gawk. She lit up like a scarlet paper lantern spying on these naked boys she did not even know!
            Oblivious, the naked boys picked the ripest and juiciest tomatoes from the fields until they each held an enormous armful. The bigger boys bickered over the largest and juiciest tomatoes, their cheeks bulging and juice running down their chins while the little ones sprawled out on a patch of grass and gobbled as many as they could. At last, after watching them thieving all their hard-earned, juicy ripe tomatoes, two of my mother’s friends leaped down the tree and charged at the naked boys.
            “Eeep!” a small naked boy cried as he noticed my mother’s friends bounding towards him, fists waving like furious farmers.
            “Ha ha, tee-hee! Come and get me!” an older boy teased as he sprinted away. He hurled a tomato at his pursuers, but it flew by and splattered on the ground.
            Soon, the other naked boys had spotted my mother’s friends and stuck their tongues out as they raced away.
            “Come back here, you thieves and rascals!” my mother’s friend shouted as he chased after the naked boys. They jumped over rocks, flew by bushes, and darted over the tiny stone bridge on the river. The naked boys took flying leaps and plopped into the reservoir, safe from their pursuers. My mother’s friends could only stand at the edge, hurling insults back and forth with the naked boys along with a few tomatoes and pebbles until they finally gave up and came trudging back. As the pursuers came in sight, my mother and her friends howled with laughter at the sight of their scratched tomato-splattered friends; now, with the mystery solved, it was time to run back, clean up, and climb into bed before their parents noticed they were gone.

Artist Statement :
“You are here.”  To me this means we must celebrate those tiny moments in our lives that make us who we are.  The story below is about a moment from my mother’s childhood in China.
By: Tony Zeng
Age: 12
Irvine

Monday, August 1, 2011

Winners for June, 2011

The theme: My Place
The winners:

Art

My Dreams Are My Place


By Brianna B.
Age 15
Brea Branch Library

Artist Statement:
I made this simply because I want to travel around the world. Drawing helps me escape reality to fantasy. I create my drawings as I create my life.

Poetry

My Life, My Place

Pots and pans clanging.
T.V. blaring.
Dog barking.
Little brother whining.
My home. My place.

Bell ringing.
Books closing.
Lockers slamming.
Teenagers gossiping.
My school. My place.

Leaders preaching.
Choir singing.
Pages turning.
Everyone praying.
My temple. My place.

Music blasting.
Bodies gracefully leaping.
Feet shuffling.
Faces smiling.
My dance studio. My place.

Stress building.
Thoughts flying.
Memories returning.
Dreams forming.
My mind. My place.

Career flourishing.
Family thriving.
World cooperating.
Problems disappearing.
My future. My place.

By Ayesha M.
Age 17
Heritage Park Regional Library

Artist Statement:
This poem depicts all the places I belong to.

Prose

Down the Road

June 2nd, 011
          There has always been something rather magical about Tuesdays evenings, especially in Charlotte, Iowa. It’s getting a bit more specific, right? I know. That’s because during these times, something happened. It’s one of those somethings that you can’t help, but let out a sigh of nostalgia or possibly sadness. I still can’t tell the difference. Yet, it started in the summer of the year 1976. I was seven years old. Hold your horses- I’m not going to quite spoil the ending for you yet, simply because this story starts will start with the end and end at the start.
            I was in my room, just last Tuesday, sorting through my belongings. When you go off to college, you tend be ushered out quickly. Or that’s how my parents are. My mother is the dominating figure in our household. She wanted me to go far away for school. She would have sent me off to the North Pole if she could, but obviously there aren’t any colleges there; so she settled for New York. Just enough distance between me and any lousy job I could get in my hometown. Ever since the economy went down the toilet, things have been a bit hard here. My father, on the other hand, is the quieter of the two. He prefers to keep to his writings and hide away behind piles and piles of mythological textbooks. Occasionally, he’ll wander out into our garden, cursing and sometimes screaming. When we ask him what’s wrong, he claims that the pixies are out to steal his flowers. Mom says he’s gone a bit loon in the head ever since his father passed away when I was younger. She just shakes her head when he starts rambling about serpents at the dinner table. Don’t tell anyone, but I think that they were meant for each other. Mom’s the realistic one, the one who has reasonable goal. Dad is the dreamer, the researcher, and at times, the hallucinator, but my parents’ strong personalities definitely even out in the long run.
            As a child, my Dad would buy me little books, teaching me about mythological creatures. I was sort of interested, but as I grew older, my fascination wore off. My fairytale collection is stacked in the corner of the room, waiting for a human grasp of any sort. The poor things have been neglected for so long that they had a thin layer of dust on top. Carefully, I pick up my scrapbook that sits in an empty drawer. Like the fairytales, it had also been ignored. Very gently did I start turning the pages, staring at pictures of colorful tulips, beautiful roses, and my favorite, wild daisies. Mom never was much of a gardener. She likes to look at them through glass, but tending for them was never a goal, never excited her much. And so, for the longest time, our garden was a simple patch of dirt.
            Everything changed when Caleb moved across the street.
            Having new neighbors is a rare event. Almost anyone outside of Iowa would have never heard of our little town. When the Luca’s moved in, I remember bouncing excitedly in our living for hours. My mom was a nervous wreck. She told me that our house was too messy, too childish, too strange to invite the neighbors over. She told me that she didn’t like new people, especially high classed people like the Luca’s. Both parents were lawyers from such and such big city and they made gobs of money. They also made Mom very, very, very anxious. Her hands fluttered by her side as she scrambled to clean every inch of the house. To her, the family pictures weren’t at the right angle. The curtains didn’t match the walls. The floor had too much grime. Most of all, my dad wasn’t exactly presentable material. There had been times when he scared off guests by telling them stories about shadows, trolls, and goblins. He had a way of speaking that made the hairs on your arm stand and your skin crawl. He was a big hit during my childhood birthday parties. Yet, I could still remember the day they moved in like it was yesterday.
After all, today is our eleventh.
            I peered through the curtains all day, watching the new people move in. There was a mother, a father, and a young boy, just about my age. His light brown hair bounced as he ran from the front porch into the house, to the mailbox and then to the car. His shoelaces were undone and I was just surprised that his mother wasn’t scolding him for pestering the workers. His jeans were covered in grass stains and his T-shirt had a tear near his sleeves. It made me wonder where he was from, where he was allowed to run with such freedom. My dark brown eyes blinked again and suddenly there were two blue eyes staring back at me through the window. “Are you going to come and play?” He asked, his voice loud enough to hear behind the glass. I jumped up, shouted to my mother, and was out the door in a flash.
            “I’m Caleb,” he announced, “C like Corn. A like Apple. L like Legal. E like Elephant and B like... Like...” He paused, glancing down, thinking hard for a B word.
            “B like Boogie Monster?” I suggested and he nodded his head.
            “Exactly!” He grinned in approval, “B like the Boogie Monster!”
            He turned around, his eyes dancing at the mysterious staircase a few houses down our street. The staircase left up to a mysterious road, one that most people only took when looking for adventure. It was supposedly the pathway to a mansion. When it was burnt down in 1846, no one ever put in the effort to recover the beautiful house. What was left was a legend and rumors of ghosts and spirits. There were stories- like one time, a girl walked in and never came out. During the winter, you could hear howls from the wolves nearby and I would just cover my ears, waiting for them to be over. He started trudging up the stairs that led to the Road, an area I tried to avoid at all costs. No one knew what was in the area where the mansion once stood. As I watched him start walking, my eyes widened, my feet frozen in their spot. I wasn’t allowed there. Mom told me if I ever set foot there, I would be grounded for life. Dad said I would be taken by the Shadows. Both options sounded pretty awful and so I was terrified at the thought. Caleb stopped, seeing that his new companion wasn’t following him. “I already told my Mom that I was with you. She said she would tell your Mom! So c’mooon,” he teassured, his hand waving for me to come. I didn’t want to seem like the weak link in our newfound friendship. I never had been very popular with the other children, especially since Leon, the neighborhood bully told everyone that my Dad was crazy. I only had a moment to think, but the decision was rather obvious to me. Quickly, I trotted after him, my hair hitting my back as I went along.
            The trees were starting to get taller and taller as we walked in further and further. The shadows grew darker. The grey clouds loomed above us. It looked like it was about to rain any moment. Something ruffled in the woods, causing me to stiffen. A light breeze flew by, my body shivering from the cold. The feeling of security was gone. The only reason why I didn’t run out screaming was because Caleb was there. I had only met him ten minutes earlier, but already it was as if I could feel his hand in mine. The way his bright eyes looked at me, how his lips would curl when I said something that he approved of, it was like having my own personal north star. He was guiding me and frankly, I trusted him.
            It wasn’t long before my feet got tired. I was below average height in my second grade class and so I had the tendency to be just a bit slower than everyone else. I bit my lip to keep myself from complaining too much. Because I was an only child, I wasn’t used to keeping my mouth shut too often. My parents were always there to listen. “Caleb, are we th- oof!” I accidentally bumped into him, causing the two of us to fall onto the grass. Almost instantly, he was back on his feet, brushing himself off before helping me up as well. This area wasn’t familiar to me. I lived here all of my life and never once had I wandered this far into down the Road. Around me were grass and weeds reaching in every direction, straining for sunlight that seemed to be peering from the heavens above. The trees were almost smiling, their branches waving at us. The most remarkable part were millions and millions of flowers surrounding us. They weren’t anything special, just wild daisies, but as a child, it was a marvelous sight. It was almost as if the Fairy Queen deemed us her prince and princess.
            “Wow! Caleb!” My lips spread into a wide smile as I leaned back to stare at the sky. The seven year boy grinned at me before grabbing my hand, dragging me into the center of the field. We stayed there for what seemed like ages. We caught fireflies with our hands and ooh’ed and ahh’ed as they flew away. We spent our summers like that, living like children, dreaming big, and loving life to its fullest.
            My eyes were filled with tears by the time I got to the end of the scrapbook. I shook my head, trying to the trembles in my body. Caleb and I were best friends for a long time. We planted daisies in front of our house that bloomed beautifully in the sun. When it rained, they looked like pixie dust had just been sprinkled on top. We went at each other’s house every chance we got, pretending to be imaginary creatures. In my backyard, we would be fairies and pixies. It was down the Road when our powers were at its full strength. Daisy petals showered our hair, leaving our cheeks rosy and youthful.
            It was the summer before seventh grade when our rituals stopped. He stopped them first. He had grown almost two feet and a half since the day I first met him. He was no longer the little boy I once knew. Muddy shoelaces were replaced with cleats and grass stained jeans were no more. I knew he would grow up. I just never thought his blue eyes that once lit my days up with excitement, would suddenly extinguish, leaving me in the dark to fend for myself.
            “Grow up,” he said to me.
            It was a Tuesday summer evening, 1983.
            It’s been three weeks since we graduated.
            It’s been four years since we started high school.
            It’s been five years since he grew up.
            It’s been five and a half years since I went back down the Road.
            It’s been six years since our last summer together.
            And it’s been eleven years since we first met.
            There hasn’t been a day that’s gone by where I don’t close my eyes and feel the comfort Caleb once gave me. Funny how some things work out. Today is a Tuesday. The leaves are starting to turn their brightest green and the wild daises are already at full bloom. The sky is starting to darken and the sun is slowly sinking behind the silhouettes of smiling trees.

By Katie Q.
Age 17
Villa Park Branch Library

Artist Statement :
Most people live in the present, others still live in the past. As we grow older, we become enamored with the idea of childhood and therefore, there will always be a place in our hearts for what used to be.

Honorable Mentions

Poetry

The Dwelling of the Lord of Sky

Warning:
This is my place,
Do not intrude for I am the Lord of Sky.
Or I will banish you without a trace,
Forever be denied.

“A push of a button,
gadgets in whirs
an utter of spells
The cauldron stirs.
Up in the sky,
a cabin perched
on clouds it lies,
naked to the human eye.
A god stood with his hand up high,
He muttered a curse, he breathed a sigh.
The clouds closed in shutting out light
From earth, darkness swept by.
The moon survived and then it rose,
It then held strong.
Against the unrelenting currents of darkness
That had just begun.”

The dwelling was made of solid wood,
Its insides filled with golden ore.
Gadgets and machines, around they stood,
Robots, weapons, and spellbooks galore!
The ground was gems,
Stairs were diamonds,
The roof was slim
Heaps of diamonds.

{Yes I am a nutty one
and here on clouds I have much fun.
My house is 200 stories high.
Did I tell you it also flies?
I have my own cloudy lake
Ozone and nitrogen make tasty cakes.
I control how the aircrafts fly,
My lightning bolts are terrible guides.
You know, they just plunge around,
Blasting those humans with booming sounds.
This is my cabin, my place,
My dwelling in the sky.
Who am I? You sure you have not a trace?
I am your Jupiter, Zeus, Lord of the Sky!

Hail the Olympus on the clouds!}

By Billy H.
Age 12
University Park Branch Library  

My Place

This hidden place I crawl myself into,
It’s suffocating and intoxicating
Every day is the same as the last
I step out and I get a slap in the face
So I crawl back into my place

I wait until that one day
When He comes down to save me,
I know He will deliver me from evil
But that evil keeps sucking me in
And I crawl back into my place

I’m trapped with no way out of this maze
Death is rolling through every wall
I can’t stay in here for very long
Or it will come and destroy me
But why do I crawl back into my place?

I see that light in front of me
And I realize it’s just my dumb lamp
It had only been a silly dream
What a relief to find out it’s all over
I turn off the light and,
I crawl back into My Place

By Victor T.
Age 17
La Habra Branch Library

My True Home

A place of family,
Filled with love and care.
Where I first grew up,
It is the place,
Where my grandparents reside.
Though not my house,
It is my true home.

Its white walls,
Covered with memories –
Pictures both old and new.

From whom I first learned to use a knife,
And follow a recipe,
There grandma stands –
Cooking
The kitchen always in use.
Though not my house,
It is my true home.

Music,
With no sheets nor notes
Just a piano,
A harmonica,
And a ukulele.
Bringing joy and laughter,
Grandpa inspires me,
A young child,
With his musical talents.
So begin my lessons,
First a piano then a violin.
Though not my house,
It is my true home.

By Alyssa C.
Age 16
Katie Wheeler Branch Library

My
Special Place
1) From My Heart to Your Heart,
2) From My Battlefield to Your Battlefield,
3) From the Wars I have Fought, to the Wars You have Fought,
4) From the Fake Video Game Series of Call of Duty, to the Real Life War Games happening in Iraq as we speak,                                  
5) From the Leader of the Los Angeles Lakers (Kobe Bryant of course), to the Captains and Different Soldiers in the Military,
6) From the Famous Singer Justin Bieber, to all the Woman who continue to serve Our Country,
7) From all the “From’s” I’ve used in this poem, to all the “Thank You’s” you guys have gotten while fighting for our country,
8) I have decided that My Place is a place that I can’t stop thinking about and appreciating when I go to sleep,                                                                            9) The place I am talking about is My Heart, and all of the things that lie within in it.              
10) Specifically, it is what I call Family, and what all the Soldiers call Home.
11) Therefore, I say God Bless to all the Soldiers who are fighting constantly to protect our country, and God Bless to the United States of America.

By Arya T.
Age 15
Aliso Viejo Branch Library

Artist Statement:
The reason I wrote my entry was not to win, but to send a special message to everyone. That is basically it :)
Homeland

Trablus
My home of birth
Your sea of blue I swam to pursue
Your mountain of green I climbed to dream
Your crowded street I strolled for food to eat
Your sudden rain I remember so plain
Your traditional culture I never departure
 My land of origin
Trablus
By Jad N.
Age 14
Heritage Park Regional Library

Artist Statement:
I was born in Tripoli, Lebanon and I wrote this poem to remeber the good memories I had in Tripoli. This poem, even though it is short, represents how I feel about my city. When I moved here about five years ago, I never thought I would miss my city so dearly, but I did and I feel it is always important to remember the memories I've had so I can keep it in my heart and never forget it...

Her Unsettled Place

A chilling breeze burning through her body,
The half-open window glass
Lets her view the open world
And its wonders, no doubt
And the horrors that came with it

An uncollected gust of wind
Poking through the uneven, hurt, painful edges of glass

A slow brush against the glass forces out the striking,
Illuminated, iridescent beads of blood
Onto the surface

The overpowering, hypnotizing wind
Melodiously picks up the ache,
Gently, softly carries it away through a dream

As the mysteries unravel themselves
Her eyes open in astonishment,
Her view upon the world outside the glass
Slowly changes

The smell of the spring flowers
Morphing into the scent of darkness
The sun smiling upon her through the window
Unable to get through the fogged glass

A half-open smile, etched upon her face
And a glance outside the window
Brings realization into her body
And a burning chill down her back

Realization of her place,
Her unsettled place in this world,
Finally comes to the restless girl

By Akshay V.
Age 15
Brea Branch Library

Prose

Traditional Dishes from Vietnam

Vietnam has many traditional dishes. These varieties of eats describe the type of people in Vietnam: who they are and how they become to be. The food can range from many tastes: sweet, spicy, salty, sour, etc. As you read the short paragraphs ahead, you will realize that your perspective of the Vietnamese culture will change…                                                                                                                            Phở                                                                                                        
Phở is a Vietnamese noodle soup usually served with beef (Phở Bò) and chicken (Phở Gà). The soup includes noodles made from rice and is often served with Vietnamese basil, lime, bean sprouts that are added to the soup by the diner. The origin of Phở is still unknown; however, Phở was created under Chinese and French influences. Its location seems to be somewhere southwest of Hanội in Nam Dinh Province in the early 20th century. The cooks tried to please both the French and Vietnamese people by creating a mixture of tastes from the Chinese (with local rice noodles, of Chinese origin) and the French (red meat, of French origin). It was first served from vendors in large boxes until the first pho restaurant opened in the 1920 at Hanội. After the defeat of South Vietnam, refuges brought this traditional Vietnamese dish to many different countries, including the U.S.

Bún bò Huế                                                                                              
Bún Bò Huế is a famous Vietnamese soup rice vermicelli dish. The main flavor of the dish is lemon grass. Bún Bò Huế originated in the old imperial capital of Central Vietnam, Huế. The broth is prepared by cooking beef bones for a long period of time, as well as a large variety of different spices including lemon and chili. Shrimp paste is also a very important ingredient. It is common for a diner to add a dollop of shrimp paste directly to the soup. Bún bò Huế is commonly served with mung bean sprouts, lime wedges, cilantro sprigs, raw onions, and thinly sliced banana blossom and usually includes chunks of well cooked oxtail, thin slices of marinated beef shank, and pig’s knuckles or pork. Purple cabbage or iceberg lettuce will usually replace banana blossom. They both resemble banana blossom in texture, not in taste. Bún bò Huế can also include cubes of congealed pig blood, which has a color between dark brown and maroon, and a texture resembling gelatin.                                                                                               

Bánh Cuốn          (Spring Rolls)
 Spring rolls, sometimes referred to as a summer roll, are basically not fried eggrolls. Not only do these rolls taste good, but they are good for you. The spring roll differentiates to the eggroll because you are able to be creative, use your imagination, and mix and match. The Spring Roll consists of fried or not fried meat, shrimp, prawn, sausage, and lobster. The veggies include cucumbers, lettuce, mint leaves, basil leaves, and cilantro leaves. You will also need rice spring roll wrappers and the dipping sauce, nước mắm pha. To create the sauce, add fish sauce, lime, garlic, sugar, small red and green peppers and water. Mince the garlic and peppers. Add the sugar into a bowl of hot water to help dissolve it quickly. Add fish sauce, lime, and the minced garlic and peppers into the sugar water. Now go out there and create your own Spring roll!                                                                                                                                   
Vietnam is a very interesting country.  Like many other countries, it has unique characteristics. This is my place. No matter where we are and what we do, we will never forget the place where it all began, our own place!!!

By Brendan L.
Age 12
Garden Grove Regional Library

Artist Statement :
I wrote this peice of prose because my mom inspired me. All of her family lives in Vietnam and she wishes they came here to live with her. Without them, she feels alone. This inspired me to write this essay. She is afraid that when she calls back home that one of her family member will get hurt and that she won't be able to see them again. For example, my uncle died and she never got a last chance to say good bye.