🗺 The Map That Drew Itself
In this beautifully illustrated interactive storybook, young A2-level readers follow Kai, a curious boy who finds a strange old map in his grandmother’s attic. The map is blank at first, but as Kai walks through his town, the map draws itself, marking special locations with golden stars. At each star, Kai discovers a hidden story about one of his neighbours — the baker who once sailed the seas, the florist who paints secret murals at night, the old postman who writes poetry. Kai learns that every person has an extraordinary story if you take the time to ask. Features 14 pages of rich A2-level narrative with vocabulary tooltips, flashcards, matching, fill-in-the-blank, and a 10-question comprehension quiz.
Lesson Plan
- Chapter 1: The Attic — Kai finds a strange blank map in his grandmother’s attic
- Chapter 2: The First Star — the map leads Kai to the bakery and Mr. Costa’s secret past
- Chapter 3: The Flower Lady — Mrs. Yamamoto’s hidden talent for painting murals
- Chapter 4: The Postman’s Poems — old Mr. Singh writes beautiful poetry in secret
- Chapter 5: The Last Star — the map leads Kai back to his own grandmother
- Chapter 6: The Story Festival — Kai brings the whole town together
Key Vocabulary
Grammar Points
- Past simple in narrative: Kai found a strange old map in his grandmother’s attic.
- Used to for past habits: Mr. Costa used to be a sailor and travelled the world.
- Could / couldn’t for ability: Nobody could believe that the quiet postman wrote poetry.
- Direct speech: “Every person has a story,” Grandma said. “You just have to ask.”
- When for time clauses: When Kai walked past the bakery, a golden star appeared on the map.
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