Turning composer study into something children actually ask for again.

If you’ve ever wanted to introduce your children to classical music but weren’t sure where to start beyond “let’s listen to some Mozart,” the Story Orchestra series might be exactly what your home education library is missing. These interactive picture books pair gorgeous illustrations with real sound clips from famous orchestral scores, turning composer study from a worksheet exercise into something children genuinely want to pick up again and again.

Written by Katy Flint and illustrated by Jessica Courtney-Tickle, the series retells classic ballets, operas and orchestral works as picture-book stories. Press a button on the page, and you hear a 10-second clip of a real orchestra playing the music that inspired that scene. It’s a simple idea, but it does something a lot of music appreciation resources struggle with: it lets children connect a piece of music to a feeling, a character, or a moment in a story, rather than just a composer’s name and a date.

The Story Orchestra: Four Seasons in One Day


The Story Orchestra: Four Seasons in One Day book cover

The book that started the series is built around Vivaldi’s The Four Seasons. We follow a little girl called Isabelle and her dog, Pickle, as they travel through all four seasons in a single day, carrying a small apple tree that buds, blossoms, and loses its leaves as the story moves from spring through to winter. Children press the buttons to hear ten excerpts from the violin concerti as each season unfolds in the illustrations.

At the back of the book is where this series really earns its place in a home education setting: a short biography of Vivaldi and the story behind his composition, alongside a replay function for each musical excerpt with notes on the instruments, rhythms and techniques being used. There’s also a glossary of musical terms, genuinely useful for building vocabulary around music in an age-appropriate way.

View on Amazon →

Worth knowing: reviewers consistently mention that the sound buttons need a firm, accurate push to work, and that there’s a white tab inside the back cover that needs removing before the sound board will activate — worth checking before assuming a button is faulty.

The Rest of the Series

Once Four Seasons in One Day found its audience, the series grew steadily and now covers twelve main titles in total, spanning ballet, opera, fairy tale, Shakespeare and orchestral suites.


The Story Orchestra: The Nutcracker book cover

The Nutcracker

Tchaikovsky — Clara’s Christmas Eve adventure with her nutcracker doll.

View on Amazon →


The Story Orchestra: The Sleeping Beauty book cover

The Sleeping Beauty

Tchaikovsky — the familiar fairy tale paired with the ballet’s score.

View on Amazon →


The Story Orchestra: Swan Lake book cover

Swan Lake

Tchaikovsky — Prince Siegfried follows an enchanted flock of swans to a lake.

View on Amazon →


The Story Orchestra: Carnival of the Animals book cover

Carnival of the Animals

Saint-Saëns — two brothers discover a magical animal kingdom behind their bookcase.

View on Amazon →


The Story Orchestra: The Magic Flute book cover

The Magic Flute

Mozart — a picture-book retelling of the opera.

View on Amazon →


The Story Orchestra: In the Hall of the Mountain King book cover

In the Hall of the Mountain King

Grieg — a boy’s adventure through the valleys and mountains of Norway, retelling Peer Gynt.

View on Amazon →


The Story Orchestra: The Planets book cover

The Planets

Holst — siblings blast off in a space rocket bunk bed to explore the solar system. Winner, Good Housekeeping Best Kids Book Award 2023.

View on Amazon →


The Story Orchestra: Peter and the Wolf book cover

Peter and the Wolf

Prokofiev — Peter defies his grandfather’s warnings to save his animal friends from a wolf in the woods.

View on Amazon →


The Story Orchestra: Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream book cover

Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream

Mendelssohn — mischievous fairies, lively actors and young lovers get caught up in pranks in the woods near Athens.

View on Amazon →


The Story Orchestra: Hansel and Gretel book cover

Hansel and Gretel

Humperdinck — the Grimms’ classic tale of two children, a gingerbread cottage and an evil witch in the woods.

View on Amazon →


The Story Orchestra: I Can Play book cover

I Can Play

A spin-off with a built-in keyboard so children can play eight easy pieces themselves.

View on Amazon →

PRE-ORDER

The Story Orchestra: Alice's Adventures in Wonderland book cover

Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland

Joby Talbot — tumble down the rabbit hole into Lewis Carroll’s world of magic and music. Releasing 8 October 2026.

Pre-order on Amazon →

My First Story Orchestra (Board Books)


My First Story Orchestra board book set

A sturdier board book range aimed at babies and toddlers, with six sound clips per book. The set includes Swan Lake, The Nutcracker, Four Seasons in One Day, and Carnival of the Animals – a good starting point if your little ones are still at the chewing-the-corners stage of book ownership.

View on Amazon →

Why This Works Well for Home Educators

You don’t need a structured “music lesson” to get real value out of these books. A few ways families tend to use them:

  • Composer study made concrete. Rather than reading a biography of Vivaldi or Tchaikovsky in isolation, children hear the actual music while learning about the person who wrote it and the story behind the piece.
  • Seasonal and topic-based learning. Four Seasons in One Day slots naturally into a seasons topic, The Planets pairs with a space unit, and Carnival of the Animals works well with an animals or habitats theme.
  • Building musical vocabulary early. The glossary and instrument discussions introduce terms like tempo, pizzicato or crescendo in context, which tends to stick far better than a flashcard.
  • Independent reading and replay value. Because children can keep pressing the buttons to replay clips, these books get returned to long after a single “lesson” would normally end — more exposure to the music over time, with no extra effort from you.
  • A gentle bridge to live music. Many families find that once a child recognises a piece of music from one of these books, they’re far more engaged if they later hear it performed live, on the radio, or in a film soundtrack.

They also make a thoughtful addition to a home education resource shelf if you’re building out a broader music appreciation routine alongside things like composer-of-the-term studies, or simply want something to bring out on a rainy afternoon that doesn’t feel like “work” to your children, even though it absolutely is.

As an Amazon Associate, we earn from qualifying purchases. This means that if you click on one of the product links above and make a purchase, we may receive a small commission at no extra cost to you. We only recommend books and resources we believe will genuinely benefit home educating families.

Comments

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Sign In

Register

Reset Password

Please enter your username or email address, you will receive a link to create a new password via email.

Join our Waitlist

Join us inside the Circle and get instant access to a growing hub of resources, uplifting community, and empowering inspiration.


We will email you as soon as we go live!

    Which Circle are you interested in?
    Add me to Newsletter
    We respect your privacy. Unsubscribe at any time.