Halloween story, poetry, and art for kids and families

The Pumpkin Who Lost His Glow

Poem: Once there was a pumpkin bright,
Glowing softly through the night,
But one dark eve, his light went poof!
And shadows danced upon the roof.

He searched for spark through autumn air,
Through crunchy leaves and children’s stares,
Till one kind witch with silver thread,
Sewed moonlight right into his head!

Now, every Halloween he beams,
Lighting up the children’s dreams.

Story:
Jack, the pumpkin, felt sad when his candle blew out on Halloween night. He thought he’d never glow again—until a kind witch shared a bit of moonlight magic. Now, Jack glows brighter than ever, guiding trick-or-treaters safely home.

The Witch Who Loved Halloween

In the town of Plum Pudding lived a witch named Wanda. Now, Wanda wasn’t the green-skinned, cackling kind of witch you read about in old books. Wanda was a real witch, which meant she had a pointy purple hat, a broomstick that sometimes needed a jump-start, and a very fluffy black cat named Midnight.

Every year, Wanda looked forward to one night more than any other: Halloween.

Wanda loved the spooky decorations, the crisp autumn air, and especially the children. But most of all, she loved the magic of the night. You see, on Halloween, the veil between the ordinary world and the magical world is thin, and Wanda felt the magic humming like a happy beehive.

This year, Wanda had a big problem. Her cauldron, which she used to make the most delicious, fizzy, rainbow-colored treats for the trick-or-treaters, was broken! It had a tiny, hissing crack right near the bottom.

“Oh, Midnight, what will I do?” Wanda sighed, tapping the cracked cauldron with her wand. “No Rainbow Fizzies this year!”

Midnight, who was busy trying to catch a spider web floating in the air, stopped and looked at Wanda with his big, yellow eyes. He purred a deep, rumbly purr that sounded a little like a suggestion.

Wanda gasped. “You’re right, Midnight! I don’t need a cauldron for all my treats. I just need a little help from the magic of Halloween!”

She grabbed her broomstick, which sputtered twice before zooming into the sky.

Wanda flew over Plum Pudding, watching the children in their costumes. She saw a little astronaut, a brave knight, and a tiny, wobbly pumpkin. Each child was a little spark of Halloween magic!

Wanda landed gently in the middle of the town square, right next to the giant, friendly pumpkin display. She pulled out her wand and pointed it at the biggest, roundest pumpkin.

“Abracadabra, Alakazam!” she whispered, “Let the Halloween magic fill this squash-y friend, and turn it into a treat-making machine!”

Fwoomp!

The pumpkin didn’t turn into a machine, but something even better happened. It began to glow with a warm, orange light. Wanda realized the pumpkin wasn’t a machine, it was a giant mixing bowl!

She quickly gathered her ingredients:

  • Three spoonfuls of moonbeam dust for sparkle.
  • A cup of autumn leaf crunch for flavor.
  • And a pinch of black cat purr for extra luck.

Wanda stirred the mixture with her wand. The pumpkin glowed brighter and brighter until,Pop! it began to shoot out dozens of small, perfect, rainbow-colored candies! They weren’t the fizzy ones, but they were even better: Magical Mood Candies.

When the trick-or-treaters finally reached Wanda, they were amazed. She wasn’t standing at a door; she was standing next to a glowing pumpkin that was spitting out candy!

“Happy Halloween, little ones!” Wanda cried, handing out the treats.

A little girl dressed as a princess took a candy and popped it into her mouth. Suddenly, she felt so happy she started to giggle uncontrollably.

A boy dressed as a pirate took one, and he felt so brave he decided to stop being scared of the dark.

Wanda smiled. She didn’t need a perfect cauldron. The real magic of Halloween wasn’t in her spells or her tools; it was in the joy and imagination of the children.

As the night ended and the moon began to set, Wanda flew back home, Midnight tucked safely in her hat. She looked at her cracked cauldron, and this time, she didn’t sigh. She knew that next year, she wouldn’t even bother to fix it.

She had found a new, much better way to make her Halloween treats: with a little bit of magic, a lot of color, and the help of a happy, glowing pumpkin.

The End

. The Ghost Who Couldn’t Boo

Poem: A tiny ghost named Boo-Boo Blue,
Tried so hard to say, “Boo!”
But all that came was “peep” and “meep,”
The cats would laugh, the bats would weep!

He practiced high, he practiced low,
He even scared a scarecrow!
Till one dark night, he found his cue—
The wind howled, and out came “BOO!”

Now Boo-Boo Blue’s the loudest ghost,
The one the pumpkins fear the most!

Story:
Little Boo-Boo Blue was the shyest ghost in the graveyard. No matter how hard he tried, his “Boo!” came out as a squeak—until the Halloween wind helped him find his scary voice.

Black cats, black cats,
Sugar and spice.
Add a little spook
To my Halloween night!

-Lizzie Barbie (and Eve)

Eve

Mandala Coloring Book Printable Worksheet (6) 10 – 12 yrs old

Get the entire coloring book through this link to my Etsy shop. It promises hours of coloring and enjoyment.

https://www.etsy.com/your/shops/me/listing-editor/copy/1843441197

Otherwise, I will share more free images next month and make sure to find my previous coloring pages post, one of them available through this link:

https://lovelightandlife.art.blog/2025/04/14/5/

I added poetry to add learning to the fun.

Meant for 10 – 12 year olds.

Eve

Spanish Reading & Coloring – Poesía Infantil del poeta bilingüe Profe Steve y páginas para colorear

Coloring page used for the poem – página para colorear del poema

Dear reader, I use coloring pages to trick my kids into reading poetry, and it works. I have been doing this for a few months, and now I have inspired a bilingual poet to do the same. In this post, I share 2 of his Spanish poems.

Queridos lectores, uso las páginas para colorear para conseguir que mis niños lean poesía. A ellos les gusta y siempre leen el poema al menos dos veces. Agora he inspirado a un poeta bilingüe a hacer lo mismo y aquí conparto dos de sus poemas infantiles.

Página para colorear usada por Steve en su poema – coloring page used by Steve for his poem below.

Poema “El Espantapájaros” de Profe Steve (poeta bilingüe) bájalo mediante el enlace y comparte con niños para que coloreen.

https://www.facebook.com/share/165j2FnR21/

Poema Mi Reina del poeta Profe Steve

Poesía para Colorear

https://www.facebook.com/share/1E96sBnc4o/

Follow this poet. He will inspire, and you will upgrade your language skillsinfantile. In English and Spanish

Poetry by Profe Steve, find him on X through this link:

https://twitter.com/ProfeSteve1701?t=QDWfyFdXeoGZcY3Tx0XOTw&s=09

English

Dear parent of a child who is bilingual or studying Spanish, help your child read and introduce them to Spanish poetry with these amazing children poems with coloring pages.

I tried this trick with my kids, and they love it, and they read the poems at least twice when on a coloring page.

More children poetry and coloring pages in our Facebook group. However, this group is not for children content. It’s a poetry group where we share all kinds of poetry, including children poems.

Spanish

Querido padre de un niño bilingüe o que estudia Español, ayuda a tu niño a descubrir la poesía en Español con estas páginas para colorear. Imprímelas y compártelas con todos los niños que conozcas.

Gracias por compartir la poesía e inspirar a las futuras generaciones.

Más poesía infantil y páginas para colorear en el grupo de poesía de Facebook Alma Poeta, pero el grupo no es de contenido infantil, es un grupo de poesía donde todo tema está incluído, incluso la poesía infantil.

Eve

Spanish Reading & Coloring – Poesía Infantil del poeta bilingüe Profe Steve y páginas para colorear

Coloring page used for the poem – página para colorear del poema

Dear reader, I use coloring pages to trick my kids into reading poetry, and it works. I have been doing this for a few months, and now I have inspired a bilingual poet to do the same. In this post, I share 2 of his Spanish poems.

Queridos lectores, uso las páginas para colorear para conseguir que mis niños lean poesía. A ellos les gusta y siempre leen el poema al menos dos veces. Agora he inspirado a un poeta bilingüe a hacer lo mismo y aquí conparto dos de sus poemas infantiles.

Página para colorear usada por Steve en su poema – coloring page used by Steve for his poem below.

Poema “El Espantapájaros” de Profe Steve (poeta bilingüe) bájalo mediante el enlace y comparte con niños para que coloreen.

https://www.facebook.com/share/165j2FnR21/

Poema Mi Reina del poeta Profe Steve

Poesía para Colorear

https://www.facebook.com/share/1E96sBnc4o/

Follow this poet. He will inspire, and you will upgrade your language skillsinfantile. In English and Spanish

Poetry by Profe Steve, find him on X through this link:

https://twitter.com/ProfeSteve1701?t=QDWfyFdXeoGZcY3Tx0XOTw&s=09

English

Dear parent of a child who is bilingual or studying Spanish, help your child read and introduce them to Spanish poetry with these amazing children poems with coloring pages.

I tried this trick with my kids, and they love it, and they read the poems at least twice when on a coloring page.

More children poetry and coloring pages in our Facebook group. However, this group is not for children content. It’s a poetry group where we share all kinds of poetry, including children poems.

Spanish

Querido padre de un niño bilingüe o que estudia Español, ayuda a tu niño a descubrir la poesía en Español con estas páginas para colorear. Imprímelas y compártelas con todos los niños que conozcas.

Gracias por compartir la poesía e inspirar a las futuras generaciones.

Más poesía infantil y páginas para colorear en el grupo de poesía de Facebook Alma Poeta, pero el grupo no es de contenido infantil, es un grupo de poesía donde todo tema está incluído, incluso la poesía infantil.

Eve

Free Worksheets and Blog Update

Dear reader,

Thank you for being here.

Today, I want to update you on what is new with this blog.

The update is a deepening of our homeschooling practice. We are becoming more serious and organized.

New on the blog

  1. I have added my best learning exercises (most time consuming and planned) To Payhip for sale. Do not worry, I will continue to share here for free https://payhip.com/b/NLMdU
  2. I have been sharing Spanish poetry, nothing to fear, that is for educational purposes and language learning is a favorite thing for me. I also share Latin, Italian, and Greek content (languages I am learning). Spanish is a language I can teach. Chek out my Spanish class with poetry both on Etsy and this blog
  3. Creation on worksheets on Canva, Tip! it is easy if you have digital design skills. Homeschooling parents and teachers should be on Canva
  4. I have been writing many more Spanish poems, some for children, I will also use them for education as soon as I catalogue them by level of difficulty and create a lesson, which takes months, by the way

Weather Card Printables for toddlers

Learning Materials

Please comment and let me know if any of these topics are relevant for you and what would you benefit from?

Eve

Thanksgiving Children Poems and a Turkey Story

Dear reader,

We created fun Thanksgiving poetry for our homeschooling last week. It was fun.

Lilli and Lizzie helped with the writing of some poems, and they learned to use the rhyming calendar.

Lilli and Lizzie also helped design these, and Alex (4) provided feedback and insisted the poems did not look beautiful or that it was not done. It was adorable.

We created a video of these poems which you can watch on YouTube through this link:

We also loved the turkey escape poem so much that we turned it into a short story.

Watch our turkey escape video through this link

The Great Turkey Escape: Thanksgiving Children Story

We are challenging ourselves to grow our YouTube channel. If you follow children’s entertainment, learning, and creative videos, follow us. We would appreciate it so much.

Homeschooling Thanksgiving?

Dear homeschooling crowd,

Are you searching for particular Thanksgiving content?

How are you including the Thanksgiving holiday into your homeschooling?

I will blog about this topic again.

Share your questions and comments if you need some assistance on this topic.

Eve