Kids Reading Book List

48 curated books for kids ages 5–12, organized by age, genre, and decodability.

Our library lists 48+ curated books for kids ages 5–12, organized by age, genre, and decodability. All recommendations align with the Science of Reading and are widely available at libraries - no purchase needed. Find the right book for your child's reading level, whether they need their first decodable reader or a chapter book worth staying up late for.

Note: the library is in English for now - translated picks are coming. Most titles on this list also have editions in your language at your local library.

How we pick

  • Stage over age. A book's age range here reflects when most kids can enjoy reading it on their own, not when they can hear it read aloud.
  • Decodable vs. easy reader is different. Decodable books use only phonics patterns your child has been taught. Easy readers use whole-word memory. Both matter - at different stages.
  • No affiliate links. Every book here is widely available at public libraries. Borrow first, buy only what your kid wants to re-read.
  • Variety. 5 decodable picks, 6 graphic novels, 5 classics, plus modern series across mystery, fantasy, and adventure.

Age chip

The range where independent reading typically works - e.g. Ages 7–8.

Genre chip

Easy reader, Chapter book, Graphic novel, and more.

Decodable badge

Phonics-controlled text. Best for emerging readers learning to sound out words.

Showing 48 of 48 books
  • Bob Books, Set 1: Beginning Readers

    by Bobby Lynn Maslen · 1976

    Ages 5–6DecodableDecodableBob Books

    Twelve tiny books that teach one letter sound at a time. Kids read their first real sentences using only the sounds they know. No guessing.

    Why we like it: Fastest path from knowing letter sounds to finishing a whole book. That first finished story builds more confidence than any praise ever does.

    Widely stocked at libraries and bookstores

  • Bob Books, Set 2: Advancing Beginners

    by Bobby Lynn Maslen · 1976

    Ages 5–6DecodableDecodableBob Books

    Longer sentences and trickier short-vowel words. Same simple art, same tight phonics. The bridge between absolute beginner and real early reader.

    Why we like it: Steps up the challenge without breaking the spell. Kids who finish Set 1 feel like graduates, not beginners stuck on baby work.

    Widely available at libraries

  • Bob Books, Set 3: Word Families

    by Bobby Lynn Maslen · 1976

    Ages 6–7DecodableDecodableBob Books

    Adds rhyming word families like -at, -an, -ip. Kids spot patterns and decode faster. Stories stay short. Vocabulary jumps.

    Why we like it: This is where kids stop reading letter by letter and start reading word chunks. You see the speed jump within a week.

  • Sam (Flyleaf Emergent Readers)

    by Flyleaf Publishing

    Ages 5–6DecodableDecodableFlyleaf Emergent Readers

    Classroom-grade decodable series used in science-of-reading schools. Strict phonics sequence, but the art and stories feel real - not cardboard.

    Why we like it: Closest thing to a real picture book that stays genuinely decodable. No memorize-the-shape cheating. Kids actually want to finish them.

    Available direct from Flyleaf Publishing and through schools

  • Half-Pint Readers

    by Carol Greene

    Ages 5–6DecodableDecodable

    Twenty short decodable booklets built on the CVC pattern. Single-syllable words, predictable structure. Perfect for the first independent reads.

    Why we like it: A tiny stack of tiny books means a kid can carry around their whole shelf. That changes how they see themselves as a reader.

    Available at libraries and reading-specialist suppliers

  • Frog and Toad Are Friends

    by Arnold Lobel · 1970

    Ages 6–7Easy readerFrog and Toad

    Five gentle, slightly melancholy stories about an upbeat frog and his grumpy toad friend. Newbery Honor winner that still feels modern.

    Why we like it: Treats early readers like people, not babies. The humor lands, the emotion lands, and the friendship is one of the best pairings in kid lit.

  • Henry and Mudge: The First Book

    by Cynthia Rylant · 1987

    Ages 6–7Easy readerHenry and Mudge

    Henry and his 180-pound dog Mudge. Short chapters, lots of pictures, gentle plots about sledding, the first snow, getting lost.

    Why we like it: Rylant writes spare, clean sentences. Kids feel like they're reading real chapters while the cognitive load stays manageable.

  • Mr. Putter and Tabby Pour the Tea

    by Cynthia Rylant · 1994

    Ages 6–7Easy readerMr. Putter and Tabby

    A lonely old man adopts an equally old cat from the shelter. Sweet, slow stories about companionship and small daily joys.

    Why we like it: Rare to find a kids' book starring an old person. It widens the world for kids who usually only meet characters their own age.

  • Today I Will Fly!

    by Mo Willems · 2007

    Ages 5–6Easy readerElephant & Piggie

    The first in Willems' very funny speech-bubble series. Gerald the elephant and Piggie the pig argue about whether pigs can fly. All dialogue.

    Why we like it: Built for reading aloud together. One parent voices Gerald, kid voices Piggie. Turns reading into theater.

  • The Cat in the Hat

    by Dr. Seuss · 1957

    Ages 6–7Easy reader

    Built from just 236 words. This 1957 book invented the modern easy reader. A tall, mischievous cat shows up on a rainy day. Chaos follows.

    Why we like it: The rhythm carries kids over words they couldn't decode alone. Hearing themselves read fluent verse builds momentum nothing else can.

  • Green Eggs and Ham

    by Dr. Seuss · 1960

    Ages 5–6Easy reader

    Built on a famous 50-word list. Sam-I-Am will not stop pushing his weird breakfast. The narrator will not, will not, will not try it.

    Why we like it: Pure repetition with stakes. Kids master fifty words cold without realizing they're doing drill work.

  • Amelia Bedelia

    by Peggy Parish · 1963

    Ages 6–7Easy readerAmelia Bedelia

    A literal-minded housekeeper takes every instruction at its word. 'Draw the drapes' means sketch them. 'Dress the chicken' means put it in clothes.

    Why we like it: The jokes only land if you understand idioms. Kids end up explaining the wordplay back to you. Gold for comprehension.

  • Biscuit

    by Alyssa Satin Capucilli · 1996

    Ages 5–6Easy readerBiscuit

    A small yellow puppy and his owner share quiet moments. Bedtime, walks, snack time. Very simple sentences and lovely watercolor art.

    Why we like it: Tons of repetition that never feels sing-songy. Often the first book a kid reads cover to cover without help.

  • Junie B. Jones and the Stupid Smelly Bus

    by Barbara Park · 1992

    Ages 7–8Chapter bookJunie B. Jones

    Junie B. is loud, opinionated, and grammatically chaotic. She refuses to ride the school bus home on her first day of kindergarten.

    Why we like it: Junie's voice is so specific and funny that kids forget they're reading. The first finished chapter book for a lot of seven-year-olds.

  • Dinosaurs Before Dark

    by Mary Pope Osborne · 1992

    Ages 7–8Chapter bookMagic Tree House

    Jack and Annie find a tree house full of books. The books send them to real time periods. Book one drops them in the Cretaceous.

    Why we like it: Kids who finish one tend to finish twenty. The series builds a reader identity faster than almost anything else.

  • The Absent Author (A to Z Mysteries)

    by Ron Roy · 1997

    Ages 7–8MysteryA to Z Mysteries

    Three friends - Dink, Josh, Ruth Rose - solve small-town mysteries. Twenty-six books, one per letter, all the same difficulty.

    Why we like it: Predictable structure is a feature, not a bug. Kids who love patterns tear through the whole alphabet.

  • Eva's Treetop Festival (Owl Diaries)

    by Rebecca Elliott · 2015

    Ages 6–7Chapter bookOwl Diaries

    Diary-format chapter book starring Eva Wingdale, an elementary-school owl. Color illustrations, big text, friendly handwriting font.

    Why we like it: Drawings, lists, and doodles do the heavy lifting. The leap from picture book to chapter book feels small.

  • Mercy Watson to the Rescue

    by Kate DiCamillo · 2005

    Ages 6–7Chapter bookMercy Watson

    Mercy is a pig. She lives with the Watsons. She loves buttered toast. Slapstick chaos follows. Beautifully illustrated by Chris Van Dusen.

    Why we like it: DiCamillo writes precise prose even when the story is silly. Kids absorb good sentence structure without effort.

  • Cam Jansen and the Mystery of the Stolen Diamonds

    by David A. Adler · 1980

    Ages 7–8MysteryCam Jansen

    Cam has a photographic memory. She clicks her eyes and remembers everything. In book one, she catches a jewel thief at the mall.

    Why we like it: Short, clean mysteries that always wrap up satisfyingly. A reliable on-ramp for kids who love puzzles.

  • Ivy and Bean

    by Annie Barrows · 2006

    Ages 7–8Chapter bookIvy and Bean

    Two girls who were supposed to hate each other end up best friends after a stink-bomb prank. Funny, real, a little chaotic.

    Why we like it: Girls in chapter books usually get sweet stories. Ivy and Bean get to be weird and messy. That lands differently.

  • Charlotte's Web

    by E. B. White · 1952

    Ages 8–10Classic

    Wilbur the pig is headed for the slaughterhouse until Charlotte the spider starts writing words in her web. Maybe the most loved children's novel ever.

    Why we like it: Doesn't soften death, friendship, or hard work. Still comforting throughout. The benchmark for what middle-grade can do.

  • Christmas in Camelot (Merlin Missions)

    by Mary Pope Osborne · 2001

    Ages 8–10FantasyMagic Tree House: Merlin Missions

    Longer Magic Tree House spinoff for kids who outgrew the originals but still love Jack and Annie. Higher word count, denser plot.

    Why we like it: Gives loyal Magic Tree House fans somewhere to go without restarting in a strange world. Familiarity doing real reading work.

  • Lost Treasure of the Emerald Eye

    by Geronimo Stilton (Elisabetta Dami) · 2004

    Ages 7–8AdventureGeronimo Stilton

    A nervous mouse journalist gets dragged on a treasure hunt by his cousin Trap. The text is famously playful. Words turn colored, wavy, or huge for emphasis.

    Why we like it: A gift for kids who find plain pages of text intimidating. Looks like a comic, reads like a chapter book.

  • Diary of a Wimpy Kid

    by Jeff Kinney · 2007

    Ages 8–10Chapter bookDiary of a Wimpy Kid

    Greg Heffley's middle-school diary, with stick-figure cartoons on every page. He's a deeply flawed narrator. The comedy is everything he can't see.

    Why we like it: Often the book that pulls reluctant readers across the finish line into a real novel. The illustrations make 200 pages feel like 80.

  • Dog Man

    by Dav Pilkey · 2016

    Ages 7–8Graphic novelDog Man

    After an accident, a cop and his police dog get stitched into one officer with a dog's head. Pilkey's chaotic, kid-drawn-style comics.

    Why we like it: Hard to overstate how many kids became readers because of this series. Pilkey has dyslexia and writes for the kid who hated reading.

  • The Adventures of Captain Underpants

    by Dav Pilkey · 1997

    Ages 7–8Graphic novelCaptain Underpants

    Two fourth graders hypnotize their mean principal into thinking he's a superhero who fights crime in his underwear. Mixes comic panels and prose.

    Why we like it: Bathroom humor that hides real smarts. Vocabulary jokes, narrative tricks, and meta gags tucked under the bad puns.

  • Charlie and the Chocolate Factory

    by Roald Dahl · 1964

    Ages 8–10Classic

    A poor boy wins a golden ticket to tour the world's most secretive chocolate factory. Four other children, all spoiled, don't make it out with their dignity.

    Why we like it: Dahl writes with a sharp edge that respects kids' appetite for the slightly cruel and very funny. Rich vocabulary without being precious.

  • The BFG

    by Roald Dahl · 1982

    Ages 8–10Fantasy

    An orphan girl named Sophie is snatched from her bedroom by the only friendly giant in giant country. They team up to stop the child-eating ones.

    Why we like it: The made-up giant language - snozzcumbers, whizzpopping - turns phonics into a game. Kids invent their own words for weeks after.

  • Matilda

    by Roald Dahl · 1988

    Ages 8–10Classic

    A brilliant five-year-old reads her way through the children's library, then the adult library. She survives terrible parents and a terrifying headmistress. Also: telekinesis.

    Why we like it: A book about loving books. Kids who see themselves in Matilda usually start reading more, not less, right after.

  • The Tale of Despereaux

    by Kate DiCamillo · 2003

    Ages 8–10Fantasy

    A tiny, big-eared mouse falls in love with a human princess and sets out to rescue her from the rats in the dungeon. Newbery Medal winner. Fairy-tale meets dark.

    Why we like it: DiCamillo talks straight to the reader throughout. That pulls hesitant kids in and makes them feel like collaborators, not students.

  • Because of Winn-Dixie

    by Kate DiCamillo · 2000

    Ages 8–10Chapter book

    Ten-year-old Opal finds a stray dog in a Florida grocery store. Through him, she finds the friends her new town was hiding.

    Why we like it: Quiet, character-driven, and honest about a missing parent. Often a kid's first real literature that doesn't feel like homework.

  • Wonder

    by R. J. Palacio · 2012

    Ages 10–12Chapter book

    August Pullman has a severe facial difference. He's starting fifth grade at a regular school for the first time. The novel rotates through Auggie, his sister, and his classmates.

    Why we like it: The shifting POV teaches empathy by structure alone. Kids absorb the lesson that nobody is the side character of their own life.

  • Bridge to Terabithia

    by Katherine Paterson · 1977

    Ages 10–12Classic

    Two outcast fifth graders invent a secret kingdom in the woods and rule it together. Then tragedy. Newbery winner. One of the quietest, hardest-hitting middle-grade novels ever written.

    Why we like it: It earns its sad ending honestly. Reading something this powerful at ten or eleven changes what a kid thinks books can do.

  • Holes

    by Louis Sachar · 1998

    Ages 10–12Adventure

    A boy is sent to a juvenile detention camp where the punishment is digging one five-foot hole a day. Three interlocking timelines, a curse, and a buried secret.

    Why we like it: Plot construction so tight that kids re-read it just to see how every detail lands. A masterclass in storytelling disguised as a kids' book.

  • A Wrinkle in Time

    by Madeleine L'Engle · 1962

    Ages 10–12Fantasy

    Meg Murry travels through space and time with her little brother and a friend to rescue her father from an evil disembodied mind on a distant planet.

    Why we like it: Treats kids as capable of physics, philosophy, and grief all at once. Few books trust the reader this completely.

  • The Lightning Thief

    by Rick Riordan · 2005

    Ages 10–12FantasyPercy Jackson and the Olympians

    A twelve-year-old with ADHD and dyslexia learns his learning differences mean he's the son of Poseidon. He goes to demigod camp. The Greek gods are real and messy.

    Why we like it: Riordan framed dyslexia as a feature - your brain is wired for Ancient Greek. For kids who struggle to read, that reframing matters.

  • Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone

    by J. K. Rowling · 1997

    Ages 8–10FantasyHarry Potter

    On his eleventh birthday, an orphan boy learns he's a wizard. His parents were murdered by a dark wizard. He has a place at a school for magic.

    Why we like it: Book one is genuinely the easiest in the series. Six more follow, each longer than the last. A reading habit at scale.

  • The One and Only Ivan

    by Katherine Applegate · 2012

    Ages 8–10Chapter book

    Narrated by a silverback gorilla living in a shopping-mall menagerie. Short chapters, free-verse style, deeply moving. Newbery Medal winner.

    Why we like it: Chapters are almost all under a page. Strong readers fly through. Tentative readers get natural stopping points. Everyone wins.

  • Esperanza Rising

    by Pam Muñoz Ryan · 2000

    Ages 10–12Chapter book

    A wealthy Mexican girl loses her father and flees with her mother to a California farm-labor camp during the Great Depression. Based on the author's grandmother's life.

    Why we like it: Historical fiction that teaches labor history, immigration, and class without lecturing. The food descriptions alone are worth the read.

  • El Deafo

    by Cece Bell · 2014

    Ages 8–10Graphic novel

    Autobiographical graphic novel about growing up deaf, wearing a hearing aid that felt like a superpower, and handling elementary school friendships.

    Why we like it: Treats a disability as part of a kid's whole identity, not as a lesson. Funny and warm throughout. Newbery Honor.

  • Smile

    by Raina Telgemeier · 2010

    Ages 8–10Graphic novel

    Autobiographical graphic novel about the author's four-year dental nightmare starting in sixth grade. Friendship drama, braces, growing up.

    Why we like it: Telgemeier basically invented the modern middle-grade graphic-novel memoir. Reluctant readers and voracious readers love this one equally.

  • Bone, Vol. 1: Out from Boneville

    by Jeff Smith · 1991

    Ages 8–10Graphic novelBone

    Three cartoon cousins get run out of their hometown and land in a deep, strange valley full of dragons, talking creatures, and a quiet mystery. A long epic.

    Why we like it: Looks like Bugs Bunny, reads like Tolkien. The series runs thousands of pages. Endless runway for a hooked reader.

  • New Kid

    by Jerry Craft · 2019

    Ages 10–12Graphic novel

    Jordan is one of the few kids of color at his new private school. Graphic-novel format. Sharply observed, often very funny about the small friction of being out of place. Newbery winner.

    Why we like it: The first graphic novel to win the Newbery. Honest about race and class in a way that respects the kid reader's intelligence.

  • Where the Mountain Meets the Moon

    by Grace Lin · 2009

    Ages 8–10Fantasy

    Minli sets off to find the Old Man of the Moon and ask him to change her family's fortune. Woven through with Chinese folktales from the author's own family.

    Why we like it: Folktales-within-a-novel structure invites kids to slow down and savor stories. Lush illustrations by the author throughout.

  • Stuart Little

    by E. B. White · 1945

    Ages 7–8Classic

    A mouse is born to a human family in New York City. He sails toy boats in Central Park, drives a tiny car, and sets out to find a missing friend.

    Why we like it: The unresolved ending - Stuart sets out and the book just ends - is more honest about life than most adult novels. Stays with you.

  • Tales of a Fourth Grade Nothing

    by Judy Blume · 1972

    Ages 7–8Chapter bookFudge

    Peter is a perfectly reasonable nine-year-old. His two-year-old brother Fudge is a public menace. Tightly observed, very funny family vignettes.

    Why we like it: Blume's dialogue is the kind kids quote back to each other for weeks. A solid gateway to all the other Blume books.

  • Sideways Stories from Wayside School

    by Louis Sachar · 1978

    Ages 7–8Chapter bookWayside School

    Thirty short, absurd stories about a thirty-story school built sideways by accident. Each chapter introduces one kid in the class. Read in any order.

    Why we like it: The any-order structure is a kindness to kids who can't commit to a 200-page arc yet. Self-contained wins keep coming.

  • The Watsons Go to Birmingham - 1963

    by Christopher Paul Curtis · 1995

    Ages 10–12Chapter book

    The Watsons drive from Flint, Michigan to Birmingham, Alabama in the summer of 1963. The book is hilarious for two hundred pages. Then the 16th Street Baptist Church bombing happens.

    Why we like it: Curtis lets you fall in love with the family before history breaks them. That choice teaches more about civil rights than any textbook chapter.

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