The Dreadful Awful Nothing-To-Do-Ness Situation

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Binding: Perfect Bound
Price:
Sale price£11.25

Description

The Dreadful Awful Nothing-To-Do-Ness Situation is a playful, poetic children’s story that explores a familiar childhood experience: boredom.

When viewed through the lens of modern childhood, the book offers a timely counterpoint to the growing tendency for children to turn immediately to digital devices when faced with unstructured time. Rather than relying on external stimulation, the narrative celebrates slowing down, noticing the world, and engaging imaginatively with one’s surroundings. This message aligns closely with concerns that excessive screen use can crowd out opportunities for face-to-face interaction, self-directed play, and creative thinking.

Although the story does not reference technology directly, its central theme—that “nothing-to-do-ness” can become something magical—encourages children to look beyond screens for fulfillment. By valuing imagination, inner dialogue, and playful exploration, the book gently reinforces the importance of real-world engagement, whether through shared storytelling, imaginative games, or social connection with others. In this way, The Dreadful Awful Nothing-To-Do-Ness Situation serves as a meaningful conversation starter for families and educators seeking to help children rediscover the joys of being present, creative, and socially connected without defaulting to devices.

The book follows a child who believes there is “nothing to do,” until guidance from a whimsical warted toad and an inner voice reveals that imagination can transform empty moments into rich, meaningful adventures. The story emphasizes that boredom is not a problem to be avoided but a doorway to creativity, joy, and memorable experiences built from within the child’s own mind.

When viewed through the lens of modern childhood, the book offers a timely counterpoint to the growing tendency for children to turn immediately to digital devices when faced with unstructured time. Rather than relying on external stimulation, the narrative celebrates slowing down, noticing the world, and engaging imaginatively with one’s surroundings. This message aligns closely with concerns that excessive screen use can crowd out opportunities for face to face interaction, self-directed play and creative thinking.

Details

Publisher - Storybook Studio

Language - English

Perfect Bound

Contributors

By author

Shannon Stevens


Published Date - 2026-02-10

ISBN - 9798998552793

Dimensions - 21 x 21 x 0.2 cm

Page Count - 36

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