📖 Read & Listen Free
Ms. Chen's class started a pen pal project with a school in Japan. Each student was matched with a partner, and they would exchange letters every two weeks. Kai got matched with a boy named Hiro.
Kai did not know what to write at first. He stared at the blank paper for ten minutes. Then he decided to just introduce himself — his favorite food, his pet hamster, and the fact that he liked to draw comics.
Three weeks later, a letter arrived in a pale blue envelope covered in Japanese stamps. Hiro had written back in careful English. He liked sushi, had a cat named Mochi, and he drew manga comics too.
Hiro included a small drawing of his cat. It was really good, with big round eyes and whiskers made of thin, confident lines. Kai taped it to his bedroom wall and drew a picture of his hamster to send back.
Over the months, the letters grew longer and thicker. They traded drawings, stickers, and stories about their schools. Hiro explained that in Japan, students clean their own classrooms. Kai thought that was pretty cool.
For Hiro's birthday, Kai made a small comic book — eight pages, hand-drawn and stapled, about a hamster and a cat who become friends despite living on opposite sides of the world. He mailed it in a padded envelope.
Hiro wrote back the longest letter yet. He said the comic made him laugh so much that his mom asked what was so funny. He included his own comic, drawn in manga style, continuing the story. The hamster and cat had adventures together.
At the end of the school year, both classes had a video call. Kai finally saw Hiro's face on the screen, and they both waved and laughed. It is amazing, Kai thought, how a piece of paper can connect two people across the entire ocean.