2026 IMMERSIVE STORYTELLING
…stepping into stories as new worlds unfold…
Kinder + Gr 1
Help Croco Out!
Croco
by Azul López, Kit Maude (Translator)
When Croco feels lost and misunderstood, the forest responds. A quiet snake stays close, birds call from the branches above, and curious monkeys gather nearby. Together, they remind Croco that he is not alone — and that belonging can take many forms.
Through our immersive storytelling workshop, children move, listen, and play with Croco alongside a lively mix of animal helpers, exploring curiosity, risk, and change.
Did you know?
Some pages in Croco are designed so readers have to turn the book — mirroring Croco’s topsy-turvy problem in the hole!
Azul Lopez was the winner of the 12th International Award for Illustration at the Bologna Children’s Book Fair-Fundación SM in 2022.
Kinder + Gr 2
Paws in the Snow
Bear and Wolf
By Daniel Salmieri
In a winter forest hushed by snow, Bear and Wolf meet nose-to-nose to pause in quiet wonder—watching snowflakes fall and multicoloured fish glide beneath an iced lake. As the season turns, Bear prepares for hibernation and Wolf joins its pack. They part with a promise, trusting the steady rhythm of the forest and the return of winter.
In this experience, children inhabit the winter forest with Bear and Wolf, feeling the thud of paws in deep snow, noticing colour and sound… when a sudden crack alerts them to danger.
Did you know?
Even in winter, fish stay active under frozen lakes, and light passing through the ice can make them look bright and colourful.
Gr 2+3
When Shadows Meet
Where the Wild Things Are
By Maurice Sendak
The Dark
By Lemony Snicket
Jon Klassen (Illustrator)
When Maurice Sendak published Where the Wild Things Are in 1963, he reshaped children’s literature by giving form to anger, fear, and wild imagination. Fifty years later, The Dark returns to this terrain, quietly echoing Sendak’s legacy as it asks: what emerges when two boys are unsettled by the little monsters that dwell in their own rich inner worlds?
In our approach, children explore big feelings and gentle pathways out of them through movement, reflection, and symbolic play.
Did you know?
Maurice Sendak wrote Where the Wild Things Are in 1963, and exactly 50 years later Lemony Snicket and Jon Klassen published The Dark in 2013.
Gr 1-3
(Sea) Adventures with Grandpa
Ahoy!
By Sophia Blackall
A child and his grandfather launch the funniest make-believe ocean adventure ever —right on their living-room carpet. They row through giant “waves” and battle a vacuum-cleaner squid, completely lost in their shared world of fantasy… until Dad arrives, puzzled, just as the crew demands: “Friend or Foe?”.
Through our immersive storytelling, children enter the play — facing playful “storms” and discovering how shared imagination invite adventure.
Did you know?
Sophie Blackall has won the Caldecott Medal twice, one of the highest honours in children’s book illustration in the United States, and has illustrated more than fifty books for children, making her one of the most prolific and celebrated illustrators working today.
Gr 4-5
HELLO… Anybody Out There?
The Search for Our Cosmic Neighbours
By Chloe Savage
Join Commander Julia, her brave crew, and their loyal dog Khan on a ten-year mission aboard the Star Drifter, searching planet after planet for one extraordinary answer: Are we alone? After countless days of empty skies, they land on a world that seems lifeless… until Khan sniffs out a discovery none of them ever imagined.
Within our immersive approach, young explorers join the mission — charting alien landscapes, imagining life beyond Earth, and experiencing the thrill of first contact.
Did you know?
Laika, a small stray dog from Moscow, became the first animal to circle Earth, proving in 1957 that space travel was possible.
Gr 5-7
The Island after The Tempest
The Tempest
Retold by Shakespeare’s Globe
Based on The Tempest by William Shakespeare
On a charged island shaped by memory and power, a wizard’s pent-up anger sets the island in motion. Alongside new arrivals, the fragile balance shifts and Prospero’s magic, Caliban’s earthly pulse, and Ariel’s airy forces collide, lifting the spell that holds this small world in tension.
Our immersive storytelling work invites learners to step inside the island’s shifting winds and shadows, experiencing the play’s emotions, tensions, and choices, supported by gentle moments of guided reflection.
Did you know?
Shakespeare wrote The Tempest around 1611, and exactly 400 years later, in 2011, Julie Taymor premiered her bold film adaptation starring Helen Mirren as Prospera. A story born in the early 17th century resounds with vibrant relevance today.







