See what a StoryTime Together chapter looks like
One full chapter from a story we generated for a fictional 6-year-old named Luna, interests: gardens, animals, treasure. The chapter, the discussion prompt, and the vocabulary words below are exactly what a real parent sees in the reader.
Chapter 1
The Door Behind the Roses
Luna was helping Grandma in the garden when she noticed something she had never seen before. Behind the tall pink roses, half-hidden by leaves, there was a tiny door. It was no bigger than her hand, painted gold, with little carved butterflies around the edges.
“Grandma,” Luna whispered, “has this always been here?”
Grandma was deep in conversation with her watering can on the other side of the garden, so Luna leaned closer. The door was warm. When she pressed her ear against it, she could hear something — a tiny, faraway sound, like wind chimes made out of teaspoons.
Luna had a rule about new things. The rule was: look first, decide second. She looked. The door had a small handle shaped like a curled leaf. Around the handle, the wood was a little shinier, as if many tiny hands had touched it.
Slowly, very slowly, Luna turned the handle. The door swung open without a sound. On the other side was not the brick wall Luna expected. Instead, a soft green path led away into a garden full of flowers she had never seen — flowers the colour of the inside of seashells, taller than her knees, gently humming.
A small voice, polite and a little out of breath, said, “Excuse me — are you the new gardener?”
Luna looked down. A bumblebee in a tiny yellow waistcoat was looking back up at her with serious eyes.
“I’m Luna,” she said carefully. “I don’t think I’m a gardener. I’m only six.”
The bee considered this. “Six is a very good age for finding doors,” he said at last. “Would you like to come in? We’ve been hoping someone would.”
Luna looked back at Grandma, who was still busy with the watering can. She looked at the soft green path. Somewhere, very far in, a flower was singing.
Luna had a rule: look first, decide second. What's a rule you have for yourself when something is new?
A gentle nudge
This is a connection question — there's no right answer. Help your child notice their own habit. "Hmm, what do you do when you find something new in the playground?"
cut into a shape using a tool, like the butterflies on the door
a small jacket without sleeves — the bumblebee was wearing one
What you don't see in the chapter, but is happening behind it
Chapter 2 unlocks tomorrow. Bedtime becomes a habit, not a binge.
This story is "extra-gentle" — no peril, no scary creatures, soft endings. Toggle on if your child is sensitive at bedtime.
Premium adds a parent-voice persona (Mom, Dad, Grandma, Babysitter) that reads the chapter aloud when you can't.
Every story is labeled as AI-generated. Promotion to "reviewed" requires real family feedback signals.
3 free stories. No card required. Cancel anytime.