How the Alphabet Was Made is one of Rudyard Kipling’s most inventive and affectionate Just So Stories—a playful yet thoughtful tale about how spoken sounds first became written symbols.
On the banks of the great Wagai River, curious Taffy and her patient father Tegumai begin a game: turning everyday noises—ah, sh, ya, yo—into simple drawings scratched on bark. What starts as a private amusement slowly becomes something far greater. Through shared discovery, gentle humor, and careful observation, pictures begin to stand for sounds, sounds for words, and words for meaning carried across distance and time.
Told with warmth, wit, and Kipling’s distinctive narrative voice, this story blends prehistoric imagination with timeless insight into how communication shapes human connection. Beneath the playful surface lies a quiet reverence for learning, memory, and the origins of language itself.
Narrated with clarity and charm, this classic tale invites listeners of all ages to experience the joy of discovery—and to see the alphabet not as something invented all at once, but as something lovingly made, mark by mark, sound by sound.
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