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Chicken Soup for the Preteen Soul: 101 Stories of Changes, Choices and Growing up for Kids (Ages 9-13) [NOOK Book]
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From remembering their own life experience or to watching their own children grow, most people recognize that the preteen years, ages nine to thirteen, can be one of the most awkward times in life-a period of tremendous physical and emotional change. At this age, youngsters are eager to leave the "kid" stage, yet are uncertain about what adolescence will bring; they'd rather listen to peers over parents, and hear all too often to "wait until you're older." Chicken Soup for the Preteen Soul will guide kids through this transition.
Written by and for preteens, this uplifting collection of stories touches on the emotions and situations they experience every day: making and losing friends, fitting in while keeping their personal identity, discovering the opposite sex, dealing with pressures at school including violence, and coping with family issues such as divorce.
Chapters include: On Love, On Family, On Friendship, On Choices, On Changes, On Overcoming Obstacles, Eclectic Wisdom, Tough Stuff, Attitude and Perspective and Achieving Dreams. Contributors indclude: *NSYNC, Mia Hamm, Beverley Mitchell and Karl Malone.
Whether first-time Chicken Soup readers or "graduates" of the bestselling Kid's Soul book, preteens are sure to include this in their backpacks and book bags.
Examine the contents, not the bottle.
The Talmud
Once again, I was in a new school. So was a girl in my class named Paris. That's where the similarities ended.
I was tall, with a big, moony face. She was petite and skinny with a model's delicate features.
My thick, black hair had been recently cut short into a shag style. Her natural caramel blonde hair flowed to her waist and looked great when she flipped it around.
I was twelve and one of the oldest in the class. She was eleven and the youngest in the class.
I was awkward and shy. She wasn't.
I wore baggy overalls, sweatshirts and lime-green hiking boots. Paris wore rhinestone platform shoes, little twirly skirts and expensive, size-one designer jeans.
I couldn't stand her. I considered her my enemy. She liked me. She wanted to be friends.
One day, she invited me over and I said yes. I was too shocked to answer any other way. My family had moved six times in six years, and I had never managed to develop many friendships. No one had invited me over to play since I was young enough to actually play. But this girl who wore tinted lip-gloss and the latest fashions wanted me to go home with her after school.
She lived in a fun part of town that had two pizza places, an all-night bookstore, a movie theater and a park. As we walked from the school bus stop through her neighborhood, I tried to guess which house might be hers. Was it the white one with the perfect lawn or the brown-shingled three-story house with a silky golden retriever on the front porch?
Was I surprised when she led me into an apartment building, which smelled like frying food, chemical cleaning sprays and incense! She lived on the fourth floor in a two-room place with her mother, her stepfather, her two brothers and her sister.
When we got to the room she shared with her sister, she took out a big case of Barbies—which was my next surprise. I would have thought she'd outgrown them. I had never played with them. But we sat on the floor of a walk-in closet, laughing as we made up crazy stories about the Barbies. That's when we found out that we both wanted to be writers when we were older and we both had wild imaginations.
When we got bored making up stories, she took out a small case of make-up and taught me how to put on lipstick and blush. I still thought that I looked like a clown; my face just wasn't made for make-up. Unlike me, Paris looked about eighteen years old in make-up.
We spent that afternoon screaming with laughter. Our jaws ached from smiling so much. She showed me her wardrobe, which had mostly come from a designer clothing store down the block. The woman who owned it used her as a model sometimes for her newspaper ads and gave her clothes in exchange.
Paris had the whole neighborhood charmed. The bookstore owners lent her fashion magazines, the movie theater gave her free passes and the pizza place let her have free slices. Soon I was included in her magic world. We slept over at each other's houses, spent every free moment together. Sometimes Paris and I stayed up the entire night talking. We never ran out of things to discuss, whether we were making detailed lists of boys we liked or talking about the meaning of life.
She was too poor to have a telephone, so when I was forced to be apart from her, I would dial the number of the pay phone in the pizza place. If I was lucky, Paris would be nearby and answer it.
She was my first real friend since childhood, and she helped me get through the rough years of early adolescence. My dark hair grew out and I learned to love being tall. Eventually, I found a shade of lipstick that didn't make me look like something from Scream II.
Nothing bad happened in our relationship—except for growing older. We ended up going to different junior high schools and eventually drifted apart. Since then I've had other wonderful friendships. But Paris taught me an amazing and very surprising thing about making friends: that your worst enemy can turn out to be your best friend.
© 2000 Dakota Lane, Reprinted with Permission
(c)2000. All rights reserved. Reprinted from Chicken Soup for the Preteen Soul by Jack Canfield, Mark Victor Hansen, Patty Hansen, Irene Dunlap. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means, without the written permission of the publisher. Publisher: Health Communications, Inc., 3201 SW 15th Street, Deerfield Beach, FL 33442.
| Foreword | xiii | |
| Acknowledgments | xv | |
| Introduction | xix | |
| Share with Us | xxiii | |
| 1. | Achieving Dreams | |
| Where in the World Is Carmen? | 2 | |
| Trash Bags Are for Trash | 6 | |
| Run with It | 11 | |
| The Back of David's Head | 16 | |
| Going to the Dogs | 21 | |
| If I Could Change the World for the Better, I Would ... | 25 | |
| A Run to Remember | 31 | |
| Shining Down | 33 | |
| Dreams | 36 | |
| 2. | On Friendship | |
| The Forgotten Friend | 40 | |
| Backfire! | 43 | |
| Best Friends | 48 | |
| My Best Enemy | 49 | |
| Heaven Sent | 52 | |
| Keeping in Touch | 57 | |
| My Big Solo | 60 | |
| Now You See It, Now You Don't | 63 | |
| 3. | On Family | |
| Hey, Remember When? | 68 | |
| Families That Care, Care About Families | 71 | |
| Together, We Can Do Anything | 75 | |
| Gains and Losses | 80 | |
| Forever Garrett | 83 | |
| Supper David | 88 | |
| I Flushed It | 91 | |
| This Old Chair | 95 | |
| Mom | 99 | |
| 4. | On Love | |
| Bobby Lee | 104 | |
| Love Lives On | 108 | |
| Dusty, the Wonder Dog | 112 | |
| The Teacher Who Cared | 114 | |
| The Act of Love | 116 | |
| Cry When You Are Sad | 119 | |
| Only Love Lasts Forever | 122 | |
| The Reason for Living | 125 | |
| 5. | On Death and Dying | |
| April Morning | 128 | |
| Ryan's Story | 130 | |
| I'll Never Forget Him | 133 | |
| An Angel in Disguise | 135 | |
| My Little Superman | 140 | |
| Don't Forget to Say I Love You | 142 | |
| Grandma's Cloud Game | 144 | |
| Mr. Oberley's Star | 147 | |
| Life Is Short | 150 | |
| In Every Thought | 154 | |
| 6. | On Attitude and Perspective | |
| Big at Heart | 160 | |
| The Best Christmas I Never Had | 163 | |
| The Hidden Treasure | 169 | |
| The Snow Angel | 171 | |
| You'll Be Good for Him | 174 | |
| Scott | 176 | |
| Adam's Apples | 178 | |
| Who Said There's No Crying in Softball? | 180 | |
| The Yellow Piece of Paper | 183 | |
| Hard Work Pays Off | 186 | |
| 7. | Overcoming Obstacles | |
| Annie Wiggle-Do | 190 | |
| Two Percent Is Enough | 193 | |
| The First Day of Middle School | 195 | |
| Perfect, I'm Not | 199 | |
| Rediscovery | 203 | |
| A Little Coaching | 206 | |
| The Last Runner | 210 | |
| The Power of the Pen | 212 | |
| Tough, Sturdy and Triumphant | 216 | |
| 8. | On Choices | |
| Forever Stay in My Heart | 220 | |
| Two Tickets to the Big Game | 221 | |
| Fireplug and Dad | 225 | |
| Nice Catch! | 230 | |
| The Gorilla Syndrome | 233 | |
| Just Desserts | 238 | |
| A Chicken-Noodle-Soup Day | 243 | |
| Everything Will Be Okay | 247 | |
| A Silent Voice | 254 | |
| Walking with Grandpa | 256 | |
| 9. | On Tough Stuff | |
| Kelsey | 261 | |
| Losing Mom | 266 | |
| Celebrate the Good Days | 269 | |
| Think Before You Act | 272 | |
| Getting Better | 274 | |
| For the Best | 278 | |
| A Smile Can Save a Life | 281 | |
| My One Regret | 284 | |
| The Perfect Figure | 287 | |
| Pale Dawn of a New Day | 290 | |
| 10. | On Changes | |
| My Very First Kiss | 294 | |
| A Life Once Lived | 299 | |
| Papa | 302 | |
| Taking a Stand | 306 | |
| Loving Equally | 310 | |
| Just Do It! | 313 | |
| I Love You, Lindsey | 315 | |
| My Best Friend | 317 | |
| You Know You're Growing Up When... | 320 | |
| 11. | Eclectic Wisdom | |
| Redsy | 326 | |
| Tippy | 330 | |
| What's a Miracle, Granddad? | 333 | |
| Never Put Rocks in Your Mouth | 336 | |
| The Moment I Knew I'd Never Be Cool | 338 | |
| Lost | 343 | |
| Kindness Is a Simple Gift | 345 | |
| Our Christmas Secret | 347 | |
| What I've Learned So Far | 350 | |
| Afterword: The End | 357 | |
| More Chicken Soup? | 358 | |
| Supporting Preteens | 359 | |
| Who Is Jack Canfield? | 361 | |
| Who Is Mark Victor Hansen? | 362 | |
| Who Is Patty Hansen? | 363 | |
| Who Is Irene Dunlap? | 364 | |
| Contributors | 365 | |
| Permissions | 380 |
Anonymous
Posted February 5, 2012
This is my first time readibg a book from the chicken soup seris, so I got a free sample. I thought that because it had such a silly name, it would have been a silly idea of a book; that is not the first timr i was wrong;] This book is quite ibspiribg. I loved what i read in the free sample, maybe so much, tha i may buy the full book
2 out of 2 people found this review helpful.
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Posted July 19, 2011
If u guys dont like chicken soup then why are u commenting on it? Others might like it inn the world u know. And chicken soup is suppossed to comfort people...not really make thrm barf. So shut up a keep that kind of unnecessary stuff to urself...nobody likes a complainer: l
2 out of 3 people found this review helpful.
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Posted May 29, 2011
It makes me barf!
2 out of 3 people found this review helpful.
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Posted May 6, 2012
This book really changed my life. I am truly inspired. These wonderful teens and preteens send in touching stories about what is hapening to them in real life. Some stories are about how a certain wonderful child did something, and some are how a certain child lost something. This author puts these letters in her books because she cares for people and wants them to know that they are not the only ones going through something. I recommend this book with all of my heart and hope people read this book and feel the same way that I do about this ever so inspirational book and author.
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
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Posted April 23, 2012
Im 11 do you think i should get it? Whats it about?
~Savannah age 11~
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
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Posted April 8, 2012
U are so fumb! I mean, either that post was super fake (which is kinda dumb) or that post was real (which is both disturbing and stupid because of germs). Therefore, you are stupid noth ways!
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
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Posted February 25, 2012
It a good book just from a sample
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
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Posted February 4, 2012
Idk my friend has it and idk if i should get it
1 out of 3 people found this review helpful.
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Posted January 30, 2012
Amazing! It gives me nice comfort, good laughs, and a warm, warm heart! I love it!!!!!!!
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
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Posted January 25, 2012
Helped me through so many things- and I haven' t even read the whole thing! I promise- once u buy it, u won' t regret it!
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
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Posted January 16, 2012
Please help me and anwser my question
1 out of 2 people found this review helpful.
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Posted January 7, 2012
I'll have to ask my mom if I can read this. :(
1 out of 2 people found this review helpful.
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Posted December 28, 2011
I read the sample of the book and it was awesome!!! I would highly recommend this book and maybe you could add this to your wishlist too if you do not have the money yet.
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
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Posted December 28, 2011
This is a great book it is veryinnnsporational book!!!!,!!!!!!!!!!!!
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
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Posted December 27, 2011
Love it. Helpful and funny!
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
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Posted October 12, 2011
Im eleven and this book is great. Has helped me through tough times by giving me some ideas on how to solve my problems.
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
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Posted October 5, 2011
I am 12and i love this book
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
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Posted September 30, 2011
Wow i really love this book(:
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
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Posted August 22, 2011
I liked it alot i could not stop i read till 2:am one night ithink you will like tooi
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
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Posted August 2, 2011
Every story was heart warming and loving. It's perfect for reading a story before bed because each one is reassuring and soothing among all the worries of growing up. HIGHY RECOMMENDED FOR ANYONE AGES 9-13!!! I would definelty recommend to a friend.
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Overview
From remembering their own life experience or to watching their own children grow, most people recognize that the preteen years, ages nine to thirteen, can be one of the most awkward times in life-a period of tremendous physical and emotional change. At this age, youngsters are eager to leave the "kid" stage, yet are uncertain about what adolescence will bring; they'd rather listen to peers over parents, and hear all too often to "wait until you're older." Chicken Soup for the Preteen Soul will guide kids through this transition.
Written by and for preteens, this uplifting collection of stories touches on the emotions and situations they experience every...