Michelle Grade 9 The sleek white walls of the French hospital room glowed in the cool white light. Voices could be heard beyond the charcoal door that separated the room from the bustling corridor of the hospital. “Should we be worried?” Pondered Madame Malheureuse. Her newborn baby boy rested in her arms, eyes closed andContinueContinue reading “Papier Château”
Category Archives: March 2020 Edition
Where am I?
anonymous I wake up. In a room. A strange room. A room I have never ever seen in my life. I start to panic. I feel my cheeks heat up and my breath falls heavy. I can’t get any more air in my lungs. My eyes begin to lose focus like a dying camera andContinueContinue reading “Where am I?”
Reflective Surfaces
anonymous If I’m being honest, I can’t say that I’ve ever loved you, or hated you for that matter. It’s complicated. Lately, I’ve spent more time looking into you. Not for vanity’s sake but because I wish to see the things which were once hidden from me. I’ve thought about breaking you; watching myself shatter.ContinueContinue reading “Reflective Surfaces”
Visual Exhibition #3
Reflections, Pencil Sharpener, Pride (+ Poem #12) and Reading Glasses Reflections – Emilie Grade 11 Pencil Sharpener – Ruhi Grade 11 Pride – Hazel Grade 11 Poem #12 (Hazel)Picket fences, Symbols of isolation, Hatred of anything strange. Reading Glasses – Lia Grade 11
A City of Nightmares
Hazel Grade 11 I paused, taking a beat to try and catch my breath. I knew it was still chasing me; who would have thought a city filled with monsters and people would ever work out? This had been the second one I had encountered ever since the Decision. The first had been relatively tameContinueContinue reading “A City of Nightmares”
Ink and Opinion
To everyone who submitted to this edition, thank you so much for having the courage to put your work out there. Furthermore, thank you for giving us something to publish, because this magazine would likely not exist without your primary submissions. To everyone who has read through the magazine, or revelled in the artwork presented, aContinueContinue reading “Ink and Opinion”