Every teenager has something to relate to in this book. One of the best things about Chicken Soup for the Teenage Soul is that it has a story for everyone because it is written by teens for teens. It’s a series of short stories and poems about every hard ship high schoolers face. It deals with friendships, death, sexuality, relationships, and so much more. However, I wasn’t totally sold on this book when I first started it. Since each story is really short, I felt that it was a little hard to get into. I didn’t feel compelled to flip through the pages like I wanted to feel. However, once I got into the book a little more, I realized that it’s broken up into nine sections. Every one was completely different and had several stories that related to the theme of each section. Because of this, I found myself starting to get really involved in the book. I read through them like they were all just smaller books, each with the same theme flowing through them. Once I finished one section, I was so excited to start the next one—to hear new perspectives and new stories.
One example of a compelling (but also relatable) short story was called ‘The Funeral of My Rose’. It starts with a high school boy named Derek flying down the road in his car. He stops and buys a rose for a girl whom he finally decides to reveal his feelings to. When he gets to her house he confronts her. He tells her how he feels, fumbling though his words. He’s about to give her the rose when she rejects him abruptly. He sits on her porch, heart broken and embarrassed, before he finally decides to leave. “The next day I am in the car after a particularly wretched day at school. I sit there for a few moments letting my mind drift back to last night’s activity. Suddenly I notice the rose I had left in my car. This beautiful, red rose has now transformed into a black, stiff, thorny twig. I hold it in my hands for a few moments, and a tear rolls down my cheek. It’s time to move on.” This quote is an amazing example of how mature these stories are written. Many high schoolers go through the exact same thing: rejection, and it’s hard! But, this story makes you feel like you’re not alone in it. It helps you understand that everyone else has felt the same way too.
On top of the competing and relatable stories, this book also contains great advice. It helps you learn from others and not make their same mistakes. It also opens your eyes to the hardships people go through, and it helps to put into perspective just how lucky you might be. One piece of advice that stood out to me was a poem submitted by Ben Witte, his Uncle Tom wrote him this letter of advice soon before he passed away. “Celebrate failure with just one more try. Be mindful of the riches money can’t buy. Be grateful for wealth, but know what’s at stake. And give back to the earth, always, more than you take”. This poem is beautiful and inspiring. It encourages the reader to grow from their failure instead of sulk, and to understand that money can’t buy happiness. It’s the stories like these that will stick with me and ring through my mind when I go through challenges. Chicken Soup for the Teenage soul is inspiring and relatable; if you have ever felt alone, unloved, or like a failure, this book has something in it for you.