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Stories for 3-4 years โ€” Story Starters

Age-appropriate stories tailored for 3-4 years. Simple plots with clear beginnings and endings, familiar settings (home, school, park), lovable animal characters, gentle humour, basic emotions.

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Reading Tips for 3-4 years

  • Ask 'What do you think happens next?' to build prediction skills
  • Let your child 'read' the pictures back to you
  • Connect story events to your child's life: 'Remember when we saw a butterfly too?'
  • This is the perfect age to start a bedtime story routine

What Story Starters Need in Stories

Simple plots with clear beginnings and endings, familiar settings (home, school, park), lovable animal characters, gentle humour, basic emotions.

Recommended Genres for 3-4 years

Popular Topics for 3-4 years

Other Age Groups

0+stories created by families

Every story is unique โ€” shaped by your child's name, interests, and imagination. Here are two that families loved this week.

Real stories, created by real families.

Most Loved This Week
Bedtime
4 min read

The Night the Stars Came Down to Play

Created for Anaya, age 6

One evening, little Meera refused to sleep. "The sky is too beautiful," she whispered. So the stars heard her โ€” and one by one, they floated down through her window like golden fireflies. The smallest star, barely bigger than a marble, landed on her pillow. "We get lonely up there too," it said. Meera giggled and tucked it under her blanket. Together, they counted backwards from a hundred. By forty-two, both were fast asleep โ€” Meera dreaming of constellations, and the tiny star dreaming of warm blankets.

New Today
Adventure
6 min read

Captain Rudo and the Mango Treasure Map

Created for Kabir, age 8

Rudo found the map inside his grandmother's old recipe book โ€” drawn in turmeric ink on the back of a dosa batter stain. "X marks the sweetest mango in the world," read the tiny writing. He packed his slingshot, three rotis, and his best friend's phone number (just in case). The trail led through the neighbourhood park, past the chai stall where Mr. Iyer waved, and into the lane behind the temple nobody ever walked down. There, behind a crumbling wall covered in jasmine, stood a tree so heavy with mangoes that its branches touched the ground. Rudo bit into one. It tasted like summer holidays and his grandmother's laugh.

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