Use the book any way you want to . It’s your book. My idea is to give you something to talk about. Something that is worth talking about and worth learning the English for.
The stories give you a starting point. What happened to X? What do you think X learned from this? The longer sets of questions are both universal and personal, because we all have important answers to share.
If the English is challenging or you want to build up to the questions, there is lots you can do along the way.
Start with the pictures. What can you see? Make a list of words and phrases. If you want some grammar practice organize them into groups like nouns, adjectives, verbs.
Make sentences. Use your list to make sentences. You can make sentences that show you understand the meaning of the word or phrase. You can make sentences that show you understand the meaning of the story.
Make a paragraph. Put some of those sentences together to write a description of the story, or make a brand new story of your own.
Read the story out loud. Act it out. Add new characters and exciting plot twists. Have a narrator set the scene and finish with a moral.
Write new stories for all the other keys: the numbers, commands, punctuation marks, or letters for your language.
Have fun!
