How far can you go with gratitude?

May 4, 2021

We send out a new story or chapter each week. To read all the stories — for FREE — visit our Bookshelf page.
Heya <<First Name>>,

For about seven years, I wrote a poem a week and posted it on a blog. 

I’m not sure why, exactly. 

Anyway, one week I was noodling on a poem about gratitude. Whether it could be not-cheesy, and how far I could push the things I was grateful for. 

I mean, it’s easy to be grateful for sunshine or good health or my children. But could I also be grateful for traffic or rain or mistakes I made? 

Since my brain defaults to irreverence, I ended up writing a poem called “Messy Blessings.” Which evolved into our latest book. 

“Messy Blessings” is illustrated by Madeline Barber, a wonderful artist from Baton Rouge, Louisiana.

Even more than bringing my words to vivid life with her illustrations, Madeline turned a poem into a story.

I’m thrilled with how the book came out and super-proud of our 320 team. 


That’s Madeline.

You can buy the book on Amazon (and thanks a ton if you do), but — since we stand behind the idea that reading with kids can change the world for the better — you can also download a PDF version for free. 

Just print it out and read it to a kid. Voila! The world starts changing.

Thanks for joining this read-aloud adventure with us. 

Are we blessed or what? 🙂

Happy reading.

Jeff, Bob, and Zoe …
… who believe that reading with kids can change the world for the better

P.S. Madeline is also illustrating our next book, “Scar and the Wolf.” (See below.)

Need a book rec?

We’ve got 120 suggestions! 
Visit our Read-Aloud Recs page.

“Scar and the Wolf” Chapter 1:
Happy Unearthday, Scarlet


Illustration by Madeline Barber.

Who are you, really, when you turn 13? 

Yesterday you were a kid. Today you’re stumbling into adulthood. 

Part of you is ready to speak like an adult and think like an adult. Part of you wants Mom to make you breakfast. 

Part of you is giddy with freedom. Part of you is terrified of freedom. 

Part of you wants to talk about grownup things, like how much houses cost and will they cost more next year. Part of you wants to daydream about that cape you saw at the market, how it shimmered like water, how beautiful you’d look in it. 

But one way or another, all the conflicting parts eventually move in the same direction.

Mostly. 

Sometimes a part — like an arm or a foot, say — wants its independence so fiercely it flees its body. 

I mean, we’re talking about zombies, after all. 

Read chapter 1.  

<<First Name>>, we’d love to know what you think of this weekly story email. Just hit reply to talk to us.
Bookshelf photo by Jenny Kalahar on Unsplash.
Copyright © 2021 320 Sycamore Studios, All rights reserved.

Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list.

320 Sycamore Studios
Facebook
@320sycamorestudios

Close Bitnami banner
Bitnami
Close Bitnami banner
Bitnami