Tori-Blake | Teen Ink

Tori-Blake


Tori-Blake
Seattle, Washington
Member for 2 days

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ABOUT ME
Hey, hey, fellow writers! My dream is to be a successful author and, well, right now I'm here. I love hearing opinions, advice, and feedback about my work (I mean how else am I supposed to get better?) I'll be doing a bit of everything here, bye now!

INTERESTS AND FAVORITES
Books: Heartstopper (Alice Osman), Heartless ( Marissa Meyer), Cemetery Boys (Aiden Thomas), The Language of Seabirds (Will Taylor)
Music: K-pop, (BTS, ATEEZ, Black Pink, Stray Kids, XLOV, Enhyphen, etc), AViVA, Neoni (That type of genre what is it called?), My favorite song: I know I love you (TXT)
Movies: Nimona, The Bad Guys (1 & 2), Zootopia (1 & 2), Cruella
TV Shows: Murder Drones, TADC, She-ra and the Princesses of Power, Genres I like: Horror, anime, romance, drama, fantasy
Interests: Reading/writing, I'm getting into DND, Love listing to music, not a big fan of playing it


Poetry
By TheRareBreed PLATINUM
Lambertville, Michigan
TheRareBreed PLATINUM, Lambertville, Michigan
43 articles 0 photos 60 comments

Favorite Quote:
“The apple doesn't fall far from the tree." I guess that means we're just products of whoever made us and we don't have much control. The thing is, when people use that phrase, they ignore the most critical part: the falling. Within the logic of that saying, the apple falls every single time. Not falling isn't an option. So, if the apple has to fall, the most important question in my mind is what happens to it upon hitting the ground? Does it touch down with barely a scratch? Or does it smash on impact? Two vastly different fates. When you think about it, who cares about its proximity to the tree or what type of tree spawned it? What really makes all the difference, then, is how we land.”<br /> ― Val Emmich, Dear Evan Hansen

Poetry
By TheRareBreed PLATINUM
Lambertville, Michigan
TheRareBreed PLATINUM, Lambertville, Michigan
43 articles 0 photos 60 comments

Favorite Quote:
“The apple doesn't fall far from the tree." I guess that means we're just products of whoever made us and we don't have much control. The thing is, when people use that phrase, they ignore the most critical part: the falling. Within the logic of that saying, the apple falls every single time. Not falling isn't an option. So, if the apple has to fall, the most important question in my mind is what happens to it upon hitting the ground? Does it touch down with barely a scratch? Or does it smash on impact? Two vastly different fates. When you think about it, who cares about its proximity to the tree or what type of tree spawned it? What really makes all the difference, then, is how we land.”<br /> ― Val Emmich, Dear Evan Hansen