Story Review Desk

Three archives, side-by-side versions, cleanup actions, and approval tracking.

Approved Stories
All Sources Back to catalog Fairytalez Open source Ririro Open source Grimm CMU Open source
Ririro · Kids Books

Bird Thoughts

kids-books--bird-thoughts

Review Status Pending

Rule Cleanup

Displayed from tts_chunks

I used to live in a small house and I thought the world was small and round, made of pale blue shell. I was happy living there, but eventually, I moved to a little nest. I thought the world was made of straw and that my mother took care of it.

One day, I decided to leave the nest and see what else was out there. I flew beyond the tree and saw that the world was actually made of leaves. I had been so wrong about the world before. As I flew further and further, I saw more and more new things, and eventually, I wasn't sure how the world was made. None of my neighbors seemed to know either.

Raw JSON
{
  "cleanup_version": "v1",
  "cleanup_mode": "rule_based",
  "source_file": "story.json",
  "source_sha256": "d06fbd7fff9f7161c2a3fd99f3f5e34f4290ad14a54ba7c1233414e69851f63e",
  "source_title": "Bird Thoughts",
  "tts_title": "Bird Thoughts",
  "kind": "story",
  "canonical_url": "https://ririro.com/kids-books/bird-thoughts/",
  "slug": "bird-thoughts",
  "story_dirname": "kids-books--bird-thoughts",
  "section_slug": "kids-books",
  "title": "Bird Thoughts",
  "author": null,
  "publisher_label": "Ririro",
  "source_version": "unknown",
  "content_type": "chapter_book",
  "language": "en",
  "summary": "Bird Thoughts by Emilie Poulsson follows a young bird whose understanding of the world expands with every new home it inhabits. What begins as a pale blue shell becomes a straw nest, then a canopy of leaves, and finally something far too vast and mysterious to name. Each small discovery overturns everything the bird believed before, capturing the quiet wonder — and humbling uncertainty — of venturing beyond what you know.",
  "clean_summary": "Bird Thoughts by Emilie Poulsson follows a young bird whose understanding of the world expands with every new home it inhabits. What begins as a pale blue shell becomes a straw nest, then a canopy of leaves, and finally something far too vast and mysterious to name. Each small discovery overturns everything the bird believed before, capturing the quiet wonder - and humbling uncertainty - of venturing beyond what you know.",
  "body": [
    "I used to live in a small house and I thought the world was small and round, made of pale blue shell. I was happy living there, but eventually, I moved to a little nest. I thought the world was made of straw and that my mother took care of it.",
    "One day, I decided to leave the nest and see what else was out there. I flew beyond the tree and saw that the world was actually made of leaves. I had been so wrong about the world before. As I flew further and further, I saw more and more new things, and eventually, I wasn’t sure how the world was made. None of my neighbors seemed to know either.",
    "Emilie Poulsson was an American author and educator, best known for her children's poetry and finger-play verses in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Bird Thoughts reflects her gift for giving young readers a perspective — here, literally a bird's-eye view — that gently mirrors the experience of growing up and questioning the world around you."
  ],
  "body_text": "I used to live in a small house and I thought the world was small and round, made of pale blue shell. I was happy living there, but eventually, I moved to a little nest. I thought the world was made of straw and that my mother took care of it.\n\nOne day, I decided to leave the nest and see what else was out there. I flew beyond the tree and saw that the world was actually made of leaves. I had been so wrong about the world before. As I flew further and further, I saw more and more new things, and eventually, I wasn’t sure how the world was made. None of my neighbors seemed to know either.\n\nEmilie Poulsson was an American author and educator, best known for her children's poetry and finger-play verses in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Bird Thoughts reflects her gift for giving young readers a perspective — here, literally a bird's-eye view — that gently mirrors the experience of growing up and questioning the world around you.",
  "clean_body": [
    "I used to live in a small house and I thought the world was small and round, made of pale blue shell. I was happy living there, but eventually, I moved to a little nest. I thought the world was made of straw and that my mother took care of it.",
    "One day, I decided to leave the nest and see what else was out there. I flew beyond the tree and saw that the world was actually made of leaves. I had been so wrong about the world before. As I flew further and further, I saw more and more new things, and eventually, I wasn't sure how the world was made. None of my neighbors seemed to know either."
  ],
  "clean_text": "I used to live in a small house and I thought the world was small and round, made of pale blue shell. I was happy living there, but eventually, I moved to a little nest. I thought the world was made of straw and that my mother took care of it.\n\nOne day, I decided to leave the nest and see what else was out there. I flew beyond the tree and saw that the world was actually made of leaves. I had been so wrong about the world before. As I flew further and further, I saw more and more new things, and eventually, I wasn't sure how the world was made. None of my neighbors seemed to know either.",
  "tts_chunks": [
    "I used to live in a small house and I thought the world was small and round, made of pale blue shell. I was happy living there, but eventually, I moved to a little nest. I thought the world was made of straw and that my mother took care of it.",
    "One day, I decided to leave the nest and see what else was out there. I flew beyond the tree and saw that the world was actually made of leaves. I had been so wrong about the world before. As I flew further and further, I saw more and more new things, and eventually, I wasn't sure how the world was made. None of my neighbors seemed to know either."
  ],
  "theme_slugs": [],
  "listing_memberships": [
    {
      "type": "author",
      "slug": "emilie-poulsson",
      "title": "Emilie Poulsson",
      "url": "https://ririro.com/author/emilie-poulsson/"
    }
  ],
  "reading_meta": {
    "reading_level": null,
    "age_band": null,
    "read_time": null
  },
  "media": {
    "has_audio": false,
    "has_pdf": true,
    "has_images": true
  },
  "asset_refs": {
    "pdf_urls": [
      "https://ririro.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/02/Bird-Thoughts_CompressPdf_1_2_CompressPdf.pdf"
    ],
    "audio_urls": [],
    "image_urls": [
      "https://ririro.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/01/bird-thoughts.png"
    ]
  },
  "breadcrumbs": [
    "Bird Thoughts"
  ],
  "scraped_at": "2026-05-07T12:25:18+00:00",
  "removed_paragraphs": [
    {
      "index": 2,
      "reason": "remove_editorial_appendix",
      "text": "Emilie Poulsson was an American author and educator, best known for her children's poetry and finger-play verses in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Bird Thoughts reflects her gift for giving young readers a perspective — here, liter"
    }
  ],
  "rules_applied": [
    "normalize_punctuation",
    "remove_editorial_appendix"
  ],
  "stats": {
    "original_paragraph_count": 3,
    "clean_paragraph_count": 2,
    "removed_paragraph_count": 1,
    "tts_chunk_count": 2
  }
}