Thursday, June 18, 2026

Five Teenage Diaries to Read for Those Who Never Kept One

From anothermag.com

For the fourth installation of Girlhood Studies, columnist Claire Marie Healy reflects on the act of keeping a diary as a teenager as a way of harnessing the unfiltered thoughts and memories of one’s coming-of-age

I never kept a teenage diary. It’s a question I get asked often – it would make sense after all – but I couldn’t take to the form. Call it a by-product of growing up with the nascent internet, but I was far more likely, in the mid-2000s, to address my anxieties into Sufjan Stevens-dedicated online forums, or project fantasies onto the various photographs of fashion campaigns I collected into a messy hard drive. Among these pieces of evidence of what I was actually like, certain digital ephemera has survived: of the blog I used to write, or screenshots of conversations on MSN Messenger. But what strikes me now, even about these pieces of a former self, is that there was already something public about them.  

Looking back on your own unfiltered thoughts, in any form, is always an exercise in unreality. But because an adolescent diary is intended as a private conversation with the self, there is something especially unsettling about reading a published one. The world-famous example, of course, is Anne Frank’s historical record of living in hiding during the Nazi occupation of the Netherlands, which despite its educational power, has been long-debated in terms of the ethics of what it makes public. No matter their age at the time of writing, the problem with publishing the journal of any figure posthumously is that it hinges on permission that cannot be given.

Much like my own messy archives, many authors have found something more interesting – and I suspect truer to their girlhoods – in the form of fragments than in their verbatim teenage diaries. The magic of these texts occurs in applying a size, shape and structure to the memories of one’s coming-of-age: memories joyful and painful and, somehow, ever-present. It’s in the act of authoring those memories, not just revisiting them, that a more interesting kind of reclamation happens. 


Bone Black: Memories of Girlhood by bell hooksCourtesy of Dialogue Books

Bone Black: Memories of Girlhood by bell hooks

bell hooks’ intimate account of growing up in the South reconstructs an atmosphere as much as a clear narrative progression. Constructed of memory fragments framed from the perspective of a writer whose politics have already been formed, the recollections of growing up black and female in a patriarchal and racist society are more powerful for the fact the ‘I’ is never stable: she writes of her own memories in the first person, but often switches to observe herself – “the girl” – in the third person, as though from the outside. “Only grown-ups think that the things children say come from nowhere,” hooks writes. “We know they come from the deepest parts of ourselves.”


A Girl’s Story by Annie ErnauxCourtesy of Fitzcarraldo Editions

A Girl’s Story by Annie Ernaux

A well-thumbed and extremely grubby copy of Annie Ernaux’s A Girl’s Story has been on my desk since it was first translated into English by Alison L Strayer for Fitzcarraldo Editions in 2020. In it, Ernaux investigates a single question: simply, ‘What can I say about this girl?’ Revisiting the year 1958 – when, aged 18, she worked at a Normandy holiday camp for the summer – the story pivots around her memory of a haunting sexual experience and the confusion and self-interrogation it sparks in its aftermath. It is when, as she writes, she ‘started to make a literary being of [herself], someone who lives as if her experiences were to be written down someday.’ It captures, from a distance of some 50 years, how connecting with a teenage self can both disorient and free us. A film adaptation, by director Judith Godrèche, premiered at Cannes and has yet to receive a confirmed UK release date; seeing Ernaux on the Croisette with its young stars was like the book’s memoiristic point of view come to life. 


Memoirs of A Dutiful Daughter (1958) by Simone de BeauvoirCourtesy of Penguin Classics

Diary of a Philosophy Student (written 1926–30; published in 2004 and 2006) and Memoirs of A Dutiful Daughter (1958) by Simone de Beauvoir

Taken together, these two books provide a treasure trove into the budding feminist intellectual’s becoming – a coming-of-age both intellectual and emotional. In Diary of a Philosophy Student, consisting of her journal entries from the ages of 19 to 21, familiar struggles of becoming are set down on the page: from intrusive and controlling parents to first loves and loneliness. More particularly, it covers her first meeting with figures like Simone Weil and Jean-Paul Sartre (then Maurice de Gandillac) in real time, as they happened. In Memoirs of a Dutiful Daughter, the same time period is considered and expanded upon, as the older de Beauvoir – by now one of France’s most famous intellectuals with The Second Sex (1949) behind her – reflects on the events of her life some three decades later, when her feminist point of view has been well-established.


Reborn: Early Diaries 1947–1963 by Susan SontagCourtesy of Penguin

Reborn: Early Diaries 1947–1963 by Susan Sontag

Susan Sontag’s son, David Rieff, defended his choice to publish the diaries of his mother, including in Reborn: Journals and Notebooks 1947-1963, which covers her formative years and coming-of-age. (Interestingly, and related to my own lack of a diary, he writes that though her diary-keeping remained steady through her life, it was “the computer and e-mail” that delighted her more later on). I love Reborn, though, and am so glad it exists. I’m not sure there’s a better record of teenage intensity in all its painful self-contradiction. I often think of the entry where she writes of coming ‘closer and closer to bursting this poor shell’ and contemplating infinity, shortly followed by another stating how ‘dreary and monotonous’ the previous entry’s scribblings were. ‘Can I never escape this interminable mourning for myself?’ she wails. ‘My whole being seems tense – expectant … ’ (At the time of writing, she was only 15). 

If You’re a Girl: Selected Stories 1985-2023 by Ann RowerCourtesy of Semiotext(e)

If You’re a Girl: Selected Stories 1985-2023 by Ann Rower

If You’re a Girl is very far from a simple republished diary in form and content. But there’s something about the layered process to the publication of the original book of stories by the NY cult figure – first in 1991, in tandem with Cookie Mueller’s Walking Through Clear Water in a Pool Painted Black, and later this expanded edition in 2024 – that speaks directly to the sensation that, as writers, the younger self is always preserved in our writing even as the decades pass. Rower’s writing career has been demarcated by its stops and starts. Aged 53 when her stories were originally collected in this book form, her thrilling, hilarious auto-fictive vignettes had up until then primarily circulated in zines and readings on the poetry and postpunk scenes; when her partner, the writer Heather Lewis, died by suicide in 2002, Rower didn’t pick up a pen for another two decades after that. 

But the introduction to the 2024 edition, movingly, recounts the writer’s very first love – a girl she met in summer camp aged 14 – and the queer life the discovery of that relationship by her parents delayed, sending her “into the arms of various men [she] was not in love with” for decades to come. The context of Rower’s first transformative romance even leads to the discovery of reams of unseen material that Margot had kept after she died, in 2021 – making the later edition of If You’re a Girl as much a story about recovering an archive of a younger self as it is a collection of wild, downtown tales.

Sunday, June 7, 2026

Seven spectacular night sky events to put in your diary this summer

From bbc.co.uk

Summer brings the perfect opportunity to get outside and gaze up at the night sky.

Not only is it the best time to see the Milky Way, which appears as a band of light stretching across the starscape, but there's also a meteor shower and solar eclipse to look forward to.

As we approach the summer solstice on 21 June in the northern hemisphere, the Sun will be at its highest in the sky.

This will allow for spectacular views of the International Space Station as well as some of the natural phenomena we're treated to seeing through summer.

Summer Triangle

A picture of the night sky showing the three stars in the summer triangle. A meteor shower surrounds the stars.Image source,Getty Images
Image caption,

The Summer Triangle and meteors photographed on 12 August 2012, from Gruenstadt in Germany

For centuries, we have looked up at the night sky in awe and wonder, but if you are new to stargazing, the Summer Triangle is a good place to start.

It is an asterism (or recognisable group) made up of three bright stars forming a giant triangle. It is easy to spot and visible for most of the summer.

Its corners are marked by Vega in the constellation of Lyra, the Harp, Altair in Aquila, the Eagle and Deneb in Cygnus, the Swan.

Look toward the eastern horizon in early summer, or straight up if it is late summer. Vega is usually the first bright star you will spot at dusk.

Total solar eclipse

A solar eclipse, where the moon perfectly aligns to obscure the sun, casting an ethereal glow. Showing a glowing corona encircling the silhouette of the moon.Image source,Getty Images
Image caption,

A rare solar eclipse over the USA captured in 2025 where the Moon perfectly aligns to obscure the Sun, casting an ethereal glow

Total solar eclipses occur somewhere on Earth roughly every 18 months, but witnessing one from the same location is much rarer. On average, a total solar eclipse is visible from any given spot on Earth only once every 400 years.

The next total solar eclipse visible from the UK is not due until 2090. Before then, however, sky watchers can enjoy a spectacular partial solar eclipse on 12 August 2026, when the Moon will cover around 90% of the Sun at its peak.

The exact timing and extent of the eclipse will vary across the country. In London, the event is expected to begin at around 18:17 BST, with maximum coverage occurring at approximately 19:13 BST. In Edinburgh it starts at 18:14 BST, peaking at 19:05 BST.

While the UK will only see a partial eclipse, observers in Greenland, Iceland, northern Spain and parts of the Arctic Ocean will experience totality. The eclipse will also be visible, at least in part, across much of Europe, northern North America and north-west Africa.

If you plan to watch the eclipse, remember never to look directly at the Sun. Instead, use certified eclipse glasses or a simple pinhole projector to view the event safely.

Partial lunar eclipse

A partial lunar eclipse above houses by a body of water at moonset, the moon appears red in colour.Image source,Getty Images
Image caption,

A partial lunar eclipse at moonset in Florida, United States

Solar and lunar eclipses often occur close to each other because the Moon's orbit around Earth is tilted by about five degrees.

When the Sun, Earth and Moon align near one of the points where their orbital paths intersect, eclipse seasons occur, producing both solar and lunar eclipses within a matter of weeks.

The next partial lunar eclipse visible from the UK will take place on 28 August. In London, the eclipse will begin at 03:33 BST and deepen until maximum eclipse at 05:12 BST, when around 90% of the Moon will be immersed in Earth's umbra, the darkest part of its shadow.

As the eclipse progresses, the Moon will sink lower towards the horizon, so a location with an unobstructed view to the south-west will offer the best chance of seeing the event.

A 'cosmic kiss'

A picture showing three celestial bodies in the night sky, the Moon, Venus and Jupiter. Jupiter and Venus shown in close proximity to one another.Image source,Getty Images
Image caption,

The Moon sits above Venus and Jupiter, which are close together in the night sky in December 2008.

The two brightest planets, Venus and Jupiter, will appear to meet in the night sky around 9 June.

This rare and exceptionally close conjunction is often described as a 'cosmic kiss'. The two planets will appear to be about the same distance in the sky as the width of your little finger held out at arm's length.

Look to the west-northwest horizon just after sunset and you will have around an hour to catch a glimpse. No equipment is needed.

The International Space Station

The International Space Station (ISS) is seen from NASA space shuttle Endeavour above Earth in 2011 in space.Image source,Getty Images
Image caption,

The International Space Station with a backdrop of planet Earth, as seen from NASA space shuttle Endeavour in May 2011

Summer is the best time to see the International Space Station (ISS).

The ISS orbits Earth about 15.5 to 16 times per day. In mid-summer, nights are shorter and the Sun stays closer to the horizon, allowing the ISS to remain illuminated by the Sun for longer.

This means you can sometimes catch several flyovers in just one evening.

Thanks to its large solar panels, the ISS often appears as the brightest and fastest-moving object in the night sky, shining as a steady white light .

Perseid meteor shower

The night sky with the Perseid meteor shower and the Milky Way over a silhouetted landscapeImage source,Getty Images
Image caption,

The Perseid meteor shower and the Milky Way put on a show in the night sky over a forest in Germany

The Perseid meteor shower is one of the later celestial events of the summer, but it is regarded as one of the best displays of the year.

Occurring when Earth passes through the debris of Comet 109P/Swift-Tuttle, it is one of the brightest and fastest meteor showers.

It is known for producing vibrant 'fireball' meteors and in high numbers too. Skygazers in perfect dark sky conditions may be able to see 60 to 100 meteors per hour.

This year, the shower will be active between 17 July and 24 August, with the peak occurring on 13 August.

Summer full Moons

The full Buck Moon in the night skyImage source,Getty Images

During the summer season we will see three full Moons.

The first is the Strawberry full Moon on 30 June, rising at 12:57 BST.

As with the other full Moons across the year, it gets its name from events happening in nature around the same time.

This month's full Moon represents the harvesting of strawberries at this time of year.

In July, sky gazers can feast their eyes on the Buck Moon. Rising at 15:36 BST on 29 July, it is named after the time of year when male deer begin to grow their new antlers.

For many it marked the start of the game hunting season.

The last of the summer's full Moons, the Sturgeon Moon, rising on 28 August at 05:18 BST.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/weather/articles/cgepvrgepn4o