Turn Storytime Into Their First Words.
A complete therapist-designed system that helps toddlers build the imitation skills speech develops from.
So they don't just point, grunt, or pull you toward what they want...
They begin copying sounds, saying first words, and discovering the joy of communicating with you.
"Wait And See" Is Not A Plan.
The doctor says give it time.
So you wait, But the years when speech develops most rapidly don't wait with you.
Every month that passes is a month of missed opportunities to practice the skills that build language.
That's not patience. That's time you don't get back.
Turn everyday storytime into an opportunity to build speech.

The moment you've been waiting for.
You've done everything they told you to.
You read to them every night.
You name every object in the house.
You bought the flashcards and the toys that light up.
And still, the words aren't coming.
Because none of it was built to pull speech out.
"Everyone kept telling me to give it time. I couldn't just sit there."
"I felt so helpless. I needed something I could actually do."
Kids don't learn to talk by naming things. They learn in a sequence.
Sounds first. Then imitation. Then action words. Then real words. Most books skip straight to the end and leave you wondering why nothing sticks. This one walks the actual path, the same order therapists use, so you're finally doing something that matches how a child learns to talk.
Ten minutes at bedtime. That's the whole ask.
No waitlist. No appointment. Just you, your child, and the one thing that actually matches how they learn to talk.
Why this does what waiting and toys can't.
see
flashcards
From parents who stopped waiting.
Our pediatrician kept telling me to wait. I couldn't. This gave me something to actually do at bedtime instead of just worrying, and it made me feel like a mom again.
I was skeptical it was just another book. But the imitation one clicked. He started copying the silly sounds within a few nights. I did not expect to cry over it.
We're on a therapy waitlist until fall. This is what we do while we wait, and for the first time I don't feel completely helpless. That alone was worth it.
The order is the whole thing. Sounds, then actions, then words. Our random books never did that. It finally felt like there was a plan behind what we were reading.
I stopped comparing him to the other kids at the park and put that energy into bedtime instead. Total shift for me, honestly more than for him at first.
When we finally got in, our speech therapist actually approved of these. She said we were already doing the right things. Wish I'd found it months earlier.
Questions, answered honestly
Straight answer: this is a set of books, not a treatment, and it doesn't replace a speech therapist. What it does is give you a structured way to work with your child at home, built on the same techniques therapists use, so you're doing something supportive instead of just waiting. If you have concerns about a delay, we always encourage seeing a professional too.
Designed for ages 1 to 3, the window where imitation, actions, and first words develop. Many parents of slightly older toddlers use it too, since the sequence is what matters, not the birthday.
Most books jump straight to naming things. This follows the actual order a child learns to talk: sounds and imitation first, then action words, then first words. One book per stage, so you're not guessing.
About ten minutes a night. It's built to slot into a bedtime or playtime routine you already have, not add another chore to your day.
Then you pay nothing. Use it daily for 60 days. If you don't feel more in control and more hopeful, email us for a full refund and keep the books. No hoops.
Stop waiting. Start tonight.
You've spent enough nights worrying. This is the one thing you can actually start. Try it for 60 days. If you don't feel more in control, it's free and you keep the books.
Get the Bundle, 33% Off →