Parents share their children’s hilarious attempts at short stories

Move over J.K. Rowling! Proud parents share their children’s adorable attempts at short stories… as they battle it out for the unofficial title of best mini-author

  • Parents took to Twitter to share children’s hilarious attempts at short stories
  • The thread was kicked off by mother-of-three Jo Boyles from Salisbury
  • Her little girl wrote a hilarious story about a ghost, entitled ‘The chattering souls’ 

Proud parents have shared adorable examples of their children’s attempts at creative writing, in a Twitter thread which has since gone viral.

The thread was kicked off by single mother-of-three Jo Boyles, a bookseller at Waterstones in Salisbury, who proved that her daughter was following in her footsteps with a tweet of the little girl’s short story.

The impressive extract from the tale entitled ‘The chattering souls’ read: ‘As the day becomes night, the ghosts stir. Some littrely (sic) start to stir because they are chef ghosts.’

Shared just days ago, it has already received 44,000 retweets and 227,000 likes, prompting followers to share their own children’s work.

Single mother-of-three Jo Boyles, a bookseller at Waterstones in Salisbury, shared a hilarious extract from her little girl’s short story in a tweet which prompted other parents to do the same

Twitter user Kate, from Berkshire, also shared a picture of her child’s literature attempt,and wrote: ‘This sorrowful tale came from my (then) 6-year-old, adding a screengrab and a laughing face emoji

Posting a snap of the extract, Jo wrote: ‘My daughter has started a story and ‘Rebecca’ no longer has the greatest opening lines in literature.’

And Twitter agreed, praising the youngster’s handiwork and flooding the thread with hilarious comments.


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‘Making ghoulash?’, one follower joked of the word play, while another added: ‘SPOOKghetti BOOlognese.

Another added: ‘Last night I dreamed I went to the ghost restaurant again’, while one admitted: ‘I could write for a thousand years and never better this’. 

And as well as praising the little girls writings, other parents started to share their own children’s similar short stories. 

And the thread even spread across the pond, where American user Michelle shared her little girl’s efforts to the thread. ‘My daughter’s 7 year old literary genius! Best part is we didn’t even go to California that summer, nor did we visit cemeteries. Kids. Gotta love ‘em!’ she wrote

Sam Goodwin from Kent shared the hilariously melancholy story her little boy had written, adding: ‘My son’s literature. The scribbly lines add a certain element to the overall feel too’

Twitter user Kate, from Berkshire, wrote: ‘This sorrowful tale came from my (then) 6-year-old, adding a screengrab and a laughing face emoji.

The story read: ‘Once upon a time there was a chocolate dog. One fine day they drove up to a sign saying there was a dog show. It was on the 8th of August and the weather forecast was sunny. ‘Oh dad can we take Coco?.’

Finishing abruptly, the hilarious story concluded: ‘Finally the day came and no one knew Coco was going to melt and she did. The end.’

Finishing in close second to the previous short story, the tweet garnered a staggering 11,000 likes and 2,000 retweets, but it was far from the end of the thread. 

Stewart Holt from London joined the thread, jokingly sharing his son’s first ‘book cover’ and adding that he couldn’t wait to read it

Alyssa Hanna from New York quickly shared her own work to the thread, explaining that her mother had found her first ever ‘novel’

A self-proclaimed horse enthusiast named Skim from America joined the thread, writing ‘Move over, make way for a real star’, along with a picture of indecipherable scribblings and a drawing

Chiming in, Becs Williams from Berkshire tweeted: ‘It’s pretty awesome but take a moment to admire my daughter’s first literary efforts… Roughly translates to: ‘Little John has a huge staff, mer(r)y green coat and a stripy pair of t*ts.’

Not to be outdone, Chris Burrell from Middlesex wrote: ‘Sorry to outdo you, but 6yr old son’s masterpiece about a T Rex called Dave is clearly winning the Booker Prize…. ‘, before sharing his little boy’s sweet scribblings of the life of a dinosaur.

And the thread even spread across the pond, where American user Michelle shared her little girl’s efforts to the thread. 

Kerri Pavlik from LA chimed in on the thread, sharing a sassy note from her 8-year-old nephew who revealed he had broken a fire stoke, ending the note with ‘simple’

Chiming in, Becs Williams from Berkshire tweeted: ‘It’s pretty awesome but take a moment to admire my daughter’s first literary efforts… Roughly translates to: ‘Little John has a huge staff, mer(r)y green coat and a stripy pair of t*ts’

Meanwhile father Graeme Atkins from Glasgow shared the postcard his son Lewis sent his mother, detailing the dramatics of his holiday filming for a short film

Zoe Shaaban from Zanzibar joked that their daughters would be rivals as she shared her own child’s short story

‘My daughter’s 7 year old literary genius! Best part is we didn’t even go to California that summer, nor did we visit cemeteries. Kids. Gotta love ‘em!’ she wrote.

Her little girl’s very imaginative story read: ‘This summer we went to California. We had a family reunion overlooking the cemetery. During the reunion an earthquake shook the ground so the coffins started opening up. After all the excitement we danced to acorden (sic) music.’

Concluding the lengthy thread,  Sam Goodwin from Kent shared the hilariously melancholy story her little boy had written, adding: ‘My son’s literature. The scribbly lines add a certain element to the overall feel too.’

The youngster’s story, with impressive use of punctuation, read: ‘Today it is cold. It will be warm soon. I’m sitting in my play house. On my own. Alone’.

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