Home BreakingClara Stories: Helping Children Explore the Modern World Through Storytelling

Clara Stories: Helping Children Explore the Modern World Through Storytelling

by Joseph Wilson
2 minutes read

Gentle children’s stories about curiosity, fairness, technology, and trust.

Author Sharon Philbrick has launched Clara Stories, a thoughtful children’s book series designed to help young readers explore big ideas like fairness, technology, curiosity, money, and trust through gentle storytelling.

Created for children ages 6–9, the series uses warm seaside settings, relatable characters, and simple metaphors to introduce concepts that are increasingly shaping the modern world. Rather than teaching complex technology directly, the books focus on helping children think critically, ask questions, and understand how systems and people work together.

“At its heart, Clara Stories is really about curiosity,” says Philbrick. “Children are growing up in a world filled with technology, artificial intelligence, digital money, and rapidly changing systems. I wanted to create stories that help children explore those ideas in a calm, thoughtful, age-appropriate way.”

The series follows Clara, a curious young girl living in a peaceful coastal town, alongside her wise grandmother, Grandma Ada, and loyal dog, Max. Each story introduces an underlying real-world concept through imagination and emotional storytelling.

Current titles in the series include:

Clara and the Invisible Coins — explores saving, value, and invisible forms of money through a child-friendly adventure.

Clara and the Fair Play Rules — introduces themes of fairness, shared rules, and trust, inspired by the idea that systems work best when everyone follows the same transparent promises.

Clara Builds a Cloud Bank — gently explores diversification, balance, and different ways things can grow and change over time.

• Clara and the Thinking Machine — introduces artificial intelligence through the story of a mysterious brass mechanical bird named Airius, teaching children that machines may think quickly, but humans must guide them wisely.

• Clara and the Little Tin Jar — a warm story about patience, saving, and working toward meaningful goals.

Philbrick, who previously worked in banking and economics before moving into nonprofit community work and writing, says the inspiration for the series came from noticing how quickly the world around children is changing.

“Children don’t need fear or confusion about technology,” she explains. “They need stories that help them feel curious, capable, and thoughtful.”

The Clara Stories series has begun gaining attention online among parents, educators, and readers interested in financial literacy, emotional learning, and modern storytelling themes for children.

More information about the Clara Stories series can be found at:

www.clarastories.com

Available on Amazon and Barnes and Noble

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