Every year, as World Book Day approaches, parents across the country feel the familiar mix of excitement and mild panic. Add it to the to do list: buy the costume, make a prop, and remember the book token. Maybe your child’s school has opted for the cardboard masterpiece, inspired by your child’s favourite story.
For some, it’s a scramble. For others, it’s the perfect Instagram opportunity. Even baby classes have miniature Gruffalos and tiny wizards in tow.

But what’s it really all about?
At its heart, World Book Day is about the love and art of great storytelling. And the spark that, if ignited in childhood, can last a lifetime. Take this World Book Day as a moment to pause and reconnect with your own joy of storytelling and reflect on the stories you’ve told during your career.
The magic of storytelling
When a child falls in love with a story, something powerful happens.
Reading from a young age does far more than just build vocabulary. It strengthens imagination, empathy, emotional intelligence and critical thinking. It builds concentration in a world that constantly competes for attention. It allows children to see lives different from their own and to imagine lives they might one day lead.
Stories help children understand right and wrong, navigate big feelings, explore courage, fear, friendship and resilience, and allow them to dream beyond their reality.
We all grew up with tales like Aesop’s Fables and Little Red Riding Hood, stories that gently taught lessons about trust, bravery and consequence. We didn’t realise we were learning. We were simply captivated.
That’s the magic.
The power of characters
When a child dresses as their favourite character, they are stepping into a narrative.
They are saying:
- I see myself as brave.
- I see myself as clever.
- I see myself as adventurous.
Imaginative play deepens comprehension. It brings stories off the page and into real life. A cardboard sword becomes a symbol of courage. A homemade cape becomes independence. A paper crown becomes leadership and a hand drawn map becomes curiosity and adventure.
Practising life through stories
Take the ‘You Choose’ series by Nick Sharratt and Pippa Goodhart.
You choose:
- What kind of hero to be
- Your loyal companion to guide you
- The magical item that will help you
- Your path of adventure
- Even the baddies you’ll meet
A wand, a rope, a key. A dragon, a genie, a wolf. The decisions are endless.
But beneath the fun, something deeper is happening. Children are learning to make choices. To think ahead. To imagine consequences and feelings.
It’s storytelling as a rehearsal for life. And that is powerful.
World Book Day is a reminder that stories shape us, that the child who is encouraged to read for pleasure today, becomes the adult who thinks critically, imagines boldly and communicates powerfully, tomorrow.
When storytelling gets lost
As adults, storytelling and creative comms can become an afterthought.
Deadlines stack up. Emails pile high. Meetings fill the calendar. Communication becomes transactional. The spark – that golden dust of imagination gets shelved again and again. Yet storytelling is how humans connect. It’s how brands resonate. It’s how ideas endure. When we forget how to tell the story, we lose impact.
From childhood stories to brand stories
Need a creative boost?
At Alive we believe storytelling is not scarce, it’s in abundance.
The same spark that lights up a child choosing their quest in You Choose is the spark that drives innovation, leadership and connection in adulthood.
World Book Day is about nurturing readers. Alive is about nurturing creative storytellers.
And whether you’re building a brand, launching a campaign or rediscovering your creative edge, the story is already there.
You just have to choose it.











