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Short Stories

Japanese Stories

Learn Japanese naturally by reading, one of the fastest ways to build real fluency and vocabulary in context. Our short stories run from beginner (A1) to advanced (B2): beginner stories lean on kana with furigana readings, so you can start before your kanji is solid, then take on more characters as you grow. You build the connected-text reading skill flashcards cannot teach, the one that carries you toward manga and novels. Start at your level and read on.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need to know kanji before reading Japanese stories?
Not many. Beginner stories rely on hiragana and katakana plus a small set of the most common kanji, often with furigana readings above the characters so you can read them before you have memorized them. You learn more kanji by meeting them repeatedly in stories, which sticks better than drilling them on flashcards alone.
How do Japanese short stories help with JLPT reading?
The JLPT reading sections test whether you can follow connected Japanese text at a set level, which is exactly what graded stories train. Reading at and just above your target level, from N5 upward, builds the vocabulary, kanji recognition, and reading speed the exam rewards.
Why is reading Japanese harder than speaking simple sentences?
Because reading demands three scripts at once, dense kanji, and no spaces to mark where words begin and end. You can hold a simple spoken exchange while a written page still looks like a wall. The fix is reading practice specifically: graded stories build the recognition that speaking practice does not.
What level of Japanese should I start reading at?
Start at A1 if you are early in Japanese; those stories lean on kana and the most common kanji with reading support. Move up as your kanji recognition grows. Roughly, A1 to A2 lines up with the early JLPT levels, and B1 to B2 with the middle ones.