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Seen And Heard: Teenagers Talk About Their Lives: Teenagers Talk About Their Lives
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Seen And Heard: Teenagers Talk About Their Lives: Teenagers Talk About Their Lives in Chattanooga, TN
Current price: $84.99

Barnes and Noble
Seen And Heard: Teenagers Talk About Their Lives: Teenagers Talk About Their Lives in Chattanooga, TN
Current price: $84.99
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Seen and Heard: Teenagers Talk About Their Lives
is a rare and intimate portrait of American adolescence - a coming-of-age documentary that listens without judgment and looks without pretense. Photographer and interviewer
Mary Motley Kalergis
gives voice to young people at one of life's most intense crossroads, illuminating the moments when identity, family, friendship, and hope collide.
Through black-and-white portraits and unguarded conversations, teenagers from diverse backgrounds speak candidly about the issues that shape their lives - parents, school, love, loss, and the uncertain promise of the future. What emerges is a striking collective self-portrait of a generation: thoughtful, resilient, and searching for meaning in a complicated world.
In his foreword,
Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Sam Shepard
writes of the "animal thrill and terror of facing the unknown," praising the honesty and courage of these young people who "seem to be asking the question
Who am I?
for real." His words frame the book's central revelation - that truth often flickers between the cracks of who we think we are and who we might become.
Kalergis's documentary approach combines empathy, artistry, and journalistic precision. Like her acclaimed books on marriage, birth, adoption, and motherhood,
Seen and Heard
explores the universal human experience through the particular - finding beauty in vulnerability and strength in honesty.
This book invites parents, educators, and readers of all generations to pause, listen, and rediscover the authentic voices of youth. It is at once a time capsule of American adolescence and a timeless meditation on the courage it takes to grow up.
is a rare and intimate portrait of American adolescence - a coming-of-age documentary that listens without judgment and looks without pretense. Photographer and interviewer
Mary Motley Kalergis
gives voice to young people at one of life's most intense crossroads, illuminating the moments when identity, family, friendship, and hope collide.
Through black-and-white portraits and unguarded conversations, teenagers from diverse backgrounds speak candidly about the issues that shape their lives - parents, school, love, loss, and the uncertain promise of the future. What emerges is a striking collective self-portrait of a generation: thoughtful, resilient, and searching for meaning in a complicated world.
In his foreword,
Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Sam Shepard
writes of the "animal thrill and terror of facing the unknown," praising the honesty and courage of these young people who "seem to be asking the question
Who am I?
for real." His words frame the book's central revelation - that truth often flickers between the cracks of who we think we are and who we might become.
Kalergis's documentary approach combines empathy, artistry, and journalistic precision. Like her acclaimed books on marriage, birth, adoption, and motherhood,
Seen and Heard
explores the universal human experience through the particular - finding beauty in vulnerability and strength in honesty.
This book invites parents, educators, and readers of all generations to pause, listen, and rediscover the authentic voices of youth. It is at once a time capsule of American adolescence and a timeless meditation on the courage it takes to grow up.
Seen and Heard: Teenagers Talk About Their Lives
is a rare and intimate portrait of American adolescence - a coming-of-age documentary that listens without judgment and looks without pretense. Photographer and interviewer
Mary Motley Kalergis
gives voice to young people at one of life's most intense crossroads, illuminating the moments when identity, family, friendship, and hope collide.
Through black-and-white portraits and unguarded conversations, teenagers from diverse backgrounds speak candidly about the issues that shape their lives - parents, school, love, loss, and the uncertain promise of the future. What emerges is a striking collective self-portrait of a generation: thoughtful, resilient, and searching for meaning in a complicated world.
In his foreword,
Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Sam Shepard
writes of the "animal thrill and terror of facing the unknown," praising the honesty and courage of these young people who "seem to be asking the question
Who am I?
for real." His words frame the book's central revelation - that truth often flickers between the cracks of who we think we are and who we might become.
Kalergis's documentary approach combines empathy, artistry, and journalistic precision. Like her acclaimed books on marriage, birth, adoption, and motherhood,
Seen and Heard
explores the universal human experience through the particular - finding beauty in vulnerability and strength in honesty.
This book invites parents, educators, and readers of all generations to pause, listen, and rediscover the authentic voices of youth. It is at once a time capsule of American adolescence and a timeless meditation on the courage it takes to grow up.
is a rare and intimate portrait of American adolescence - a coming-of-age documentary that listens without judgment and looks without pretense. Photographer and interviewer
Mary Motley Kalergis
gives voice to young people at one of life's most intense crossroads, illuminating the moments when identity, family, friendship, and hope collide.
Through black-and-white portraits and unguarded conversations, teenagers from diverse backgrounds speak candidly about the issues that shape their lives - parents, school, love, loss, and the uncertain promise of the future. What emerges is a striking collective self-portrait of a generation: thoughtful, resilient, and searching for meaning in a complicated world.
In his foreword,
Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Sam Shepard
writes of the "animal thrill and terror of facing the unknown," praising the honesty and courage of these young people who "seem to be asking the question
Who am I?
for real." His words frame the book's central revelation - that truth often flickers between the cracks of who we think we are and who we might become.
Kalergis's documentary approach combines empathy, artistry, and journalistic precision. Like her acclaimed books on marriage, birth, adoption, and motherhood,
Seen and Heard
explores the universal human experience through the particular - finding beauty in vulnerability and strength in honesty.
This book invites parents, educators, and readers of all generations to pause, listen, and rediscover the authentic voices of youth. It is at once a time capsule of American adolescence and a timeless meditation on the courage it takes to grow up.

















