Chicken soup for the teenage soul 101 stories of life, love, and learning

Jack Canfield, 1944-

Book - 1997

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Subjects
Published
Deerfield Beach, FL : Health Communications 1997.
Language
English
Main Author
Jack Canfield, 1944- (-)
Other Authors
Mark Victor Hansen (-), Kimberly Kirberger, 1953-
Physical Description
354 p. : ill
ISBN
9781558744639
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Gr. 7^-12. With high-interest teenage subjects running the gamut from love, family ties, and self-esteem to developing values and life crises, such as a death in the family, this collection certainly reflects the Sturm und Drang of the age group for which it is intended. What's more, teenagers not only helped select the poems, stories, and accounts that have been included but also have written some of them--about a third of the contributors are high-school age. A number of the rest are adults' recollections about life's lessons learned, with a few contributions by well-known people, including Sandra Cisneros, Helen Keller, and Robert Fulghum. But what really makes this collection different from books of this kind is that the plainspoken, sometimes awkward selections make a positive whole. This isn't a religious book, but it is an inspirational and motivational one, sometimes funny, sometimes poignant, that teens will read because it proves that there is, indeed, some light at the proverbial end of the tunnel, something increasingly difficult to discern in YA literature and usually not apparent on the evening news. --Stephanie Zvirin

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.

I Love You, Dad If God can work through me, he can work through anyone. --St. Francis of Assisi I met a man who came to Tampa for his father's funeral. Father and son hadn't seen each other in years. In fact, according to the son, his father had left when he was a boy, and they had had little contact until about a year ago, when his father had sent him a birthday card with a note saying he'd like to see his son again. After discussing a trip to Florida with his wife and children and consulting his busy schedule at his office, the son tentatively set a date to visit his father two months later. He would drive his family down when school was out for vacation. He scribbled a note and with mixed emotions, dropped it in the mail. He heard back immediately. Written on lined paper torn from a spiral notebook, such as a schoolboy would use, were words of excitement penned in a barely legible scrawl. Misspelled words, poor grammar and incorrect punctuation bounced off the page. The man was embarrassed for his father. He thought twice about the upcoming visit. It just so happened that the man's daughter made the cheerleading squad at her school and had to go to a camp conducted for cheering techniques. Coincidentally, it started the week after school was out. The trip to Florida would have to be postponed. His father said he understood, but the son didn't hear from him again for some time. A note here or there, an occasional call. They didn't say much--muttered sentences, comments about "your mother," a couple of clouded stories about the man's childhood--but it was enough to put together a few of the missing pieces. In November the son received a call from his father's neighbor. His father had been taken to the hospital with heart problems. The son spoke with the charge nurse, who assured him his father was doing well following a heart attack. The doctor could provide details. His father said, "I'm fine. You don't have to make a trip out here. The doctor says there was minor damage, and I can go home day after tomorrow." He called his father every few days after that. They chatted and laughed and talked about getting together "soon." He sent money for Christmas. His father sent small gifts for his children and a pen and pencil set for his son. It was a cheap set, probably purchased at a discount pharmacy or variety-type store, and the kids tossed their tokens from Grandpa aside without much notice. But his wife received a precious music box made of crystal. Overwhelmed, she expressed her gratitude to the old man when they called him on Christmas Day. "It was my mother's," the old man explained. "I wanted you to have it." The man's wife told her husband that they should have invited the old man for the holidays. As an excuse for not having done so, she added, "But it probably would be too cold for him here, anyway.ö In February, the man decided to visit his father. As luck would have it, however, his boss's wife had to have an Excerpted from Chicken Soup for the Teenage Soul: 101 Stories of Life, Love and Learning by Jack L. Canfield, Mark Victor Hansen, Kimberly Kirberger, Mitch Claspy, Jack Canfield All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.