TL;DR: Pairing the right toy or game with a child's summer reading list turns stories from flat pages into immersive experiences. We break down companion toys by age group—from tactile play for toddlers to strategy games for tweens—that keep kids engaged with books all summer long.
The stack of summer reading books sits on the kitchen table. Your kid finished one, maybe two, then wandered off to find something more interesting. Sound about right?
Books compete with a lot during summer—swimming, ice cream runs down to the shops in Nashville, fireflies at dusk. But when a child has something physical to play with that connects to what they're reading, the story follows them off the page. A toy dragon next to a fantasy chapter book. A magnifying glass beside a mystery series. These aren't distractions from reading—they're extensions of it.
We've watched this play out in our store for decades. A grandparent picks up a book and a matching toy together, and suddenly that gift has ten times the staying power of either item alone.
At this age, reading is a shared activity. Toddlers sit in laps, point at pictures, and absorb language through repetition. The companion toys that work best are ones they can hold while being read to—objects that mirror what's happening in the story.
Sturdy animal figurines pair beautifully with picture books about farms, jungles, or pets. When a page shows a horse running through a field, handing a toddler a wooden horse figure makes the story tangible. Their brains are building connections between words, images, and physical objects simultaneously.
Puppet sets are another strong match. A simple hand puppet that looks like a story's main character lets a toddler "become" part of the narrative. This kind of pretend play supports language development in ways that passive listening alone doesn't. The CDC's developmental milestones resources highlight how pretend play and language acquisition are deeply linked in these early years.
Best pairings for this age:
Kids in this range are starting to read independently, but their attention spans are still short. A companion toy gives them a reason to return to the book—they want to recreate what they read.
Building sets work incredibly well here. A child reading about castles can spend an afternoon constructing one. A story about a spaceship becomes a launching pad for building their own version. The reading fuels the building, and the building fuels more reading. It's a cycle that sustains itself without any nagging from adults.
Art supplies also shine at this stage. Drawing a favorite character from a chapter book requires a child to recall details from the story—what color was the dragon? Did the pirate have an eye patch or a hook? That recall strengthens comprehension without feeling like homework.
Best pairings for this age:
Once kids are devouring chapter books on their own, the companion toys shift from figurines to experiences. Strategy games, craft kits, and creative tools let them engage with themes from their reading at a deeper level.
A child hooked on mystery books will light up over a detective kit with invisible ink pens, fingerprint powder, and a magnifying glass. Someone tearing through a survival adventure series might spend hours with a knot-tying kit or a compass learning real outdoor skills. The toy becomes a bridge between fiction and real-world curiosity.
Board games that match reading genres work surprisingly well too. A fantasy card game alongside a fantasy novel series keeps the same imaginative world alive during family game night. The story doesn't end when the bookmark goes in.
Best pairings for this age:
Tweens reading complex narratives need companion items that respect their growing sophistication. This is where journals, advanced craft kits, and world-building games earn their place.
A blank journal paired with a fiction series lets a tween write alternate endings, sketch characters, or create maps of fictional worlds. It's creative processing disguised as fun. Advanced origami kits, leather bracelet-making sets, or even calligraphy pens connect well with historical fiction or books set in specific cultures.
Tabletop role-playing games deserve a special mention here. Tweens reading epic fantasy or science fiction often crave the chance to step into a character's shoes and make decisions inside a narrative. A starter RPG set paired with the right book series can spark a creative hobby that lasts years.
Walk into our store with the title of whatever your kid is reading this summer—or just tell us the genre—and we'll point you toward three or four companion toys worth considering. That's the kind of thing we do every single day, and after 55 years of matching toys to kids, we're pretty fast at it.
Summer reading doesn't have to be a battle. Give a kid a reason to live inside the story, and the pages turn themselves.
Toy Company
The Toy Chest has been a trusted independent toy store for 55 years—with decades of experience helping families find the perfect toys.
Nashville, Indiana
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