The Flickwick Blog
Research-backed guides on bedtime stories, the science of sleep routines, and what makes the nightly story ritual matter so much.
bedtime stories
At five, children are entering a phase where imagination becomes a second home. They can hold complex plots, follow multiple characters, and start asking the questions that matter — about bravery, about fairness, about what happens when things go wrong.
Read article →sleep science
Sleep researchers call it a "contextual cue" — something in the environment or the routine that signals to the brain: it is time to wind down. The smell of chamomile, a dimming light, a particular song. A serialised bedtime story is one of the most powerful contextual cues you can create, because it combines multiple signals at once.
Read article →personalised stories
When your child appears in a story — not as a decoration, but as the character whose decisions drive the plot — the story becomes something different. It stops being fiction in the abstract and starts being fiction in the specific. It becomes theirs.
Read article →Same characters, same world, a new chapter every night. Personalised for them — free to start.
Begin their story →