登陆注册
10787600000001

第1章 Introduction

This is dedicated to the writers within for sharing their beautiful passion.

—Ann Angel

Beauty I'd always missed

With these eyes before

—The Moody Blues, "Nights in White Satin"

Ann Angel

My older sister Katie raced into her teens with a head full of crazy dark curls and wild blue eyes that warned she would take on anyone and win them over. She had looks and charm and fascinating, sometimes insane, ideas. She was the pretty girl whom all the other girls wanted to be. The guys swarmed around her like bees seeking honey. And if sometimes they seemed more like lusty dogs hungry for action, Katie was able to make them believe there was a chance without really giving them one. She was the party girl, the fun one, the beautiful sister I also wanted to be, but there were times I thought she was my tormentor.

I slunk into my own teens furtively, aware that guys failed to see me when I walked down the school halls. The girls only wanted to be around me to get near my popular big sister. Born slightly less than a year after Katie, I was the short "Irish twin" whose hair hung straight and lank. My own serious blue eyes were usually hidden behind the pages of a notebook, where I wrote snippets of stories and bad poetry.

Katie was quick to tell me I was a dork, a nerd. Too smart for guys to like. Too shrimpy for guys to think I was anything more than a kid. Too unaware to be cool.

I followed our unwritten rule, that I could talk only to those girls who weren't already Katie's friends. I had one of those. She had all the rest.

I felt little-girl blue next to my sister's dark beauty. Katie wore tight jeans and sexy silk shirts that all the girls copied, the sleeves of which all the boys loved to slide their hands along. My broadcloth shirts hung on me, and I only owned one pair of jeans.

Katie and her friends seemed always to know whose parents were gone, where the party was. While I spent Friday nights babysitting, I imagined the group I thought of as "the beautiful girls" sipping stolen liquor out of pickle jars, pairing up, and kissing boys.

Even if the topic of the next party came up in front of me, I was never invited. Had I shown up at a party, I knew the beautiful girls would have entertained themselves watching the boys pass by invisible me.

So I should have known something was up when one of the beautiful boys, a curly-haired football player named Jay[1] with deep brown eyes, showed up one night while I was babysitting my younger siblings. I invited him in to watch a movie. I can't tell you what it was about—I only noticed he sat so close that the heat of his leg seared my thigh. I glued my eyes to the television screen. I remember pulling away a bit but missing the feel of him and letting my knee fall back toward his. I kept feeding my baby sister her bottle.

I burped my sister and took her to her crib. I tucked her in, certain Jay would be gone when I returned to the family room. But he was still sitting there, watching the movie.

I considered moving to a chair but didn't want him to think I was as dorky as I knew I was. So I sat on the couch a little bit away from him.

Jay moved in. Put his arm around my shoulders. I stared at that screen as though it could swallow me, feeling the weight of his thick arm, thinking this was too cool, wondering if my face was turning red.

I had no idea what to say. I had no idea why he suddenly liked me. But I was glad he did.

I turned to tell Jay that my parents would be home soon.

He turned too.

We locked lips.

He smelled of English Leather and that warm wool smell that permeates letter jackets. I loved that kiss. In fact, I kissed him again. And again. And, why not? Again.

When we heard the garage door open, we jumped apart.

"I gotta go," he said.

I didn't notice that he failed to say, "I'll call you." He didn't look back at me as I followed him to the kitchen door. And I was too tongue-tied with his kisses to speak, so in love with his mouth and brown eyes. My mind spun with my luck! I imagined he'd call the next day. We'd go to a party the next week. My storyteller's mind floated into a perfect future.

I was convinced Jay was my prince, my ticket to popularity, my ride out of the world of nerdy people. I showed him out the back door just before my parents walked through the front. I went to bed that night one happy little dreamer.

The next day I waited for a call. It didn't come. I told Katie what had happened. And when she didn't seem happy for me, I was sure she was jealous.

On Monday at school, when the beautiful girls gathered in the bathroom after lunch to discuss the weekend, I was in there with them. My sister's sidekick, Sue, asked me about my weekend. I told her about Jay. First Maura, then Sheila, Barb, and Patty turned to listen to me. I was the center of attention as I told the popular girls about my wonderful night.

My sister Katie remained uncharacteristically silent. Before I finished my story, she turned so quietly that not a single curl swayed, and walked out the door.

It was after supper that night that she came into my room and told me, "Sue paid Jay to kiss you. It was a joke." Her eyes flashed anger at me when she added, "They were all laughing about you."

I was frozen in place. While I stood there paralyzed, a rage so wild filled me, I wanted to slap her silly. I hated her for telling me the truth, and for failing to have the power to stop her friends. I reached out, grabbed her hand, and wove my fingers between hers. I squeezed until I saw pain in her splendid eyes.

Then I hugged her and cried into her shoulder while she held on tight, as only a sister who loves you can.

I doubt I slept much that night. I know that sometime before the next morning I figured it out. Being beautiful doesn't make a person all-powerful, and it doesn't make a person good. Those girls flocked to my sister, but it seemed she couldn't control them or protect me from them. And I saw that their power to hurt me came from my own misplaced regard for them and their looks.

I recall that a blush burned my cheeks when I faced those girls the next day. But I walked tall and alone. When Sue asked me how Jay was, I stared straight into her eyes and didn't bother to answer. When Maura asked me if he'd called, I only smiled. As I looked into each face, I saw how ugly they had made themselves to me.

When I ran into Jay in the hall, I looked into those brown eyes, and though I wanted to, I didn't call him an ass. I just smiled until he blushed. I said, "I know they paid you five dollars to kiss me."

He looked down and mumbled, "I'm sorry. I didn't take the money." That evening he called me and apologized again.

Though we dated for a while after that, his kisses had lost their magic. But beauty was redefined in my life for ever after. For me, beauty comes from the goodness of a person's heart or soul, not a person's physical characteristics. I will always carry the knowledge that those girls, and others like them, aren't beautiful people. I can't be either if I let them have power over me.

And so, the stories included in this collection look beyond the pretty face to the person within. They examine the wonderful, and sometimes wretched, ways beauty exists around us. Some of the stories on these pages examine the ideal of physical beauty, some define beauty found in nature and emotion, and others respond to beauty's absence.

While some of these stories acknowledge our culture's obsession with looks, the writers refuse to accept beauty's myths. In honestly examining beauty, these authors make connections to something deeper—a beauty of the heart and soul.

I hope their stories help you to redefine beauty, to recognize that beauty is so much more than the almost impossible physical ideal we've come to worship. Beauty can be a friend who knows when to sit quietly by our side. It can be found in nature or in a stunning moment of self-recognition. Beauty can be found in one special person who knocks the breath from you because he or she is honest and unique.

Maybe we need to reach our own conclusions about what is beautiful and give beauty breadth and scope, so we'll always find something to celebrate in ourselves and those around us.

As you move from story to story, I think you'll experience a surprising range of emotions evoked by the unexpected insights that fill these pages. In the first story, Ron Koertge's "Such a Pretty Face," we see that even the most physically beautiful have rules to live by. From here, the stories move to subtle and more personal perspectives on beauty, captured in a significant moment of meaning.

Mary Ann Rodman suggests that none of us are good enough when we measure ourselves against the collective ideal of beauty. Chris Lynch's "Red Rover, Red Rover" asks if judging others based on the physical is a shallow view. Lauren Myracle's hilarious story, "Bad Hair Day," demonstrates the mistake of focusing on our flaws, no matter how insistently they demand our attention. Louise Hawes's story, "Sideshow," depicts rejection in the extreme, exploring what happens when we fail to measure up in the eyes of someone we wish to emulate.

Many of these stories depict characters in situations that unravel their beliefs about beauty and leave them with a deeper understanding of what they value in the world. Jamie Pittel's "What I Look Like" talks about how we find our own beauty and how we come to really own our beauty. Rather than in the mirror, J. James Keels suggests, we find our beauty reflected in someone close to us. While Ellen Wittlinger's "Cheekbones" shows the possibility of escape from a beauty trap, Norma Fox Mazer's "How to Survive a Name" makes it clear that sometimes beauty is nothing more than a name.

Tim Wynne-Jones shows us how we can look at the world to see beauty. Anita Riggio follows the lives of two teens: one who sees no beauty in life, and his best friend, who sees beauty all around her. Finally, Jacqueline Woodson plays on the theme that beauty can be discovered outside our physical selves. It is found in personality, in community, in the world, and in our independent values.

This collection is intended to challenge our culture's emphasis on appearance, the message that our physical self is more important than our intellect and sensibility.

May you discover, like the characters on these pages, that we aren't just pretty faces. We're individuals who define beauty through our lack of uniformity and conformity, through our intellect and uniqueness, through our enthusiasm, humor, energy, and independence.

I hope this collection encourages you to search for new and individual awareness of beauty in your life. I hope this journey moves you to discover that beauty goes beyond the physical to encompass all of the unique aspects that make up this beautiful, crazy world.

Note

[1]Some names have been changed.

同类推荐
  • Dombey and Son(II)董贝父子(英文版  下册)

    Dombey and Son(II)董贝父子(英文版 下册)

    Dickens started writing the book in Lausanne, Switzerland, before returning to England, via Paris, to complete it. The story follows a powerful man's callous neglect of his family triggers his professional and personal downfall, showcases the author's gift for vivid characterization and unfailingly realistic description. As Jonathan Lethem contends in his Introduction, Dickens's "genius … is at one with the genius of the form of the novel itself: Dickens willed into existence the most capacious and elastic and versatile kind of novel that could be, one big enough for his vast sentimental yearnings and for every impulse and fear and hesitation in him that countervailed those yearnings too. Never parsimonious and frequently contradictory, he always gives us everything he can, everything he's planned to give, and then more."
  • Our Day to End Poverty

    Our Day to End Poverty

    Imagine ending poverty at home and around the globe in our own lifetimes. With creativity and imagination this book invites us to look at our very ordinary days, from waking up in the morning to going to bed in the evening, and to begin to think about combating poverty in new, inventive ways.
  • Pink & Green Is the New Black

    Pink & Green Is the New Black

    Lucy Desberg is in eighth grade, and she's determined to make this year perfect. Over the course of the year, though, her talents for makeup and problem-solving will be put to the pgsk.com the outside, things couldn't be better: her family's spa is doing well, and she has a boyfriend, Yamir. But Yamir's in high school now, and Lucy's too embarrassed to admit that he hasn't called her in weeks. To take her mind off him, she throws herself into planning the eighth-grade masquerade, using her makeup skills to rally her classmates. But as she soon learns, ignoring a problem does not make it go away. It's destined to pop up at the worst possible pgsk.com's resourcefulness will be put to the test as she grows up and starts making decisions about the type of person—and girlfriend and friend and daughter and sister—that she wants to be.
  • A Christmas Carol(III) 圣诞故事集:圣诞颂歌/小气财神(英文版)
  • Darkness Visible

    Darkness Visible

    Darkness Visible opens at the height of the London Blitz, when a naked child steps out of an all-consuming fire. Miraculously saved but hideously scarred, soon tormented at school and at work, Matty becomes a wanderer, a seeker after some unknown redemption. Two more lost children await him, twins as exquisite as they are loveless. Toni dabbles in political violence; Sophy, in sexual tyranny. As Golding weaves their destinies together, his book reveals both the inner and outer darkness of our world. "An intensity of vision without parallel." (TLS). "A vision of elemental reality so vivid we seem to hallucinate the scenes…Magic." (New York Times Book Review).
热门推荐
  • 也看风景也读书

    也看风景也读书

    《也看风景也读书》是崔济哲先生的近期新散文集,收录散文41篇。全书洋洋36万字,内容涵盖地方风物人俗、古人古事感怀、佛说佛思佛史、历史伟人逸事,以及他国历史文化。在这本书中,有对历史人物或事件的严肃追寻,也有对独特且有趣的地方文化的展现;有当下的细枝末节,也有过往的风起云涌;有因风物之壮阔而诞生的美丽文字,也有因文字之厚重而更美胜一层的风景。这本书打开了大千世界的一条门缝儿,透过这道门缝儿,你看见的是崔先生与历史、社会、人生的对话。
  • 寒少,请离婚

    寒少,请离婚

    秦娆穿越到了七年后自己身上,莫名成了已婚人士,肚子里还有个娃!亲妈嫌弃,妹妹挑拨,丈夫冷冰冰不爱她 叔能忍,婶不能忍!秦娆一拍桌子,离婚,必须离,谁不离谁是孙子!日后秦娆抱着某人的大腿,甜甜的喊:爷爷! [甜宠爽文]
  • 快穿之还好你还在这里

    快穿之还好你还在这里

    清思一个在家里闷到爆的宅女,在软件开发的大道上杀身成仁,在彻夜不停的敲代码中不幸过劳死了。可喜可贺的是她居然没有死的透,一个自称未来人创造的系统救了她。从此以后她的任务就从敲代码变成了去往任务世界完成指定任务获取心愿值。父母还在便有来处,父母去了,不知来处,只剩归途。你不要哭,我怕抱不到你。暗恋是将自己低到尘埃里,从尘埃里开出一朵花儿,这朵花儿或许一辈子都见不得阳光。你是我义无反顾撞过的南墙,是黄粱一梦的空欢喜一场。······
  • 地表最强170

    地表最强170

    谁说NBA不适合中国人,谁说NBA只是巨人的世界。试看我大天朝地表最强170,丁浩,成为新时代的篮球之神!各位读者老爷们,我是新手,对于本书有什么评论和建议,欢迎多多评论,我会努力学习提高的!
  • 重生农家女

    重生农家女

    她重生到乡村,一醒来家徒四壁,且看小女子如何脱贫致富奔小康。
  • 黑科技梦境商

    黑科技梦境商

    又名《梦境帝国》【一部经典的创业小说!】梦境高科技的作用:在梦境中就可以实现教育、学习、技术传授、体验不同人生………李铠凭着这项划时代的高科技产品再次走向人生巅峰,问鼎世界首富,富可敌国!这是一个靠着聪明才智一步一步创造出商业帝国的故事。商场如战场!新人新书求支持求包养!票票收藏快给我!
  • 流苏染

    流苏染

    天界秦苏,误入魔天帝的圈套,为了报仇,他寻找方法,却可知,这只是那人布下的一个局。欢迎观看,收藏,新人写书,请多多支持
  • 追妻无门:女boss不好惹

    追妻无门:女boss不好惹

    青涩蜕变,如今她是能独当一面的女boss,爱了冷泽聿七年,也同样花了七年时间去忘记他。以为是陌路,他突然向他表白,扬言要娶她,她只当他是脑子抽风,他的殷勤她也全都无视。他帮她查她父母的死因,赶走身边情敌,解释当初拒绝她的告别,和故意对她冷漠都是无奈之举。突然爆出她父母的死居然和冷家有丝毫联系,还莫名跳出个公爵未婚夫,扬言要与她履行婚约。峰回路转,破镜还能重圆吗? PS:我又开新文了,每逢假期必书荒,新文《有你的世界遇到爱》,喜欢我的文的朋友可以来看看,这是重生类现言,对这个题材感兴趣的一定要收藏起来。
  • 拔草奖励属性

    拔草奖励属性

    【拔草奖励属性,力量无限增长!】 天生我才徐子期,杀尽天下无良人!不为苍生不为卿,只为自己登高门!
  • 舞弄九天

    舞弄九天

    一千万年前,战神刑天与天帝争锋,帝断其首,葬之常羊之山。一千万后,刑天的尸身修成绝世大魔,从“常羊山”逃了出来,仙界至宝“寒光剑”与仙界三位“大罗金仙”联手重创魔王刑天,魔王刑天逃入“阿罗地狱”,并放言“待本王重回巅峰,誓要攻破九州三界”。谁将是九州三界新的战神?谁将护卫九州三界安定太平?