by Allison Tait | Oct 1, 2025 | Blog, Books, Reading, Your Kid's Next Read
Have you seen the headlines? Boys aren’t reading. Again.
Still?
It seems as though the topic of boys and reading flares up in a media tsunami every couple of years and then subsides, and 2025 has definitely been one of those years. In fact, in 2025, we’re focused not just on the fact that boys aren’t reading, but the fact that the men in their lives aren’t reading either.
New research shows more support needed to get parents reading with children (Australia Reads)
Australians, especially men, are reading less than ever before (ABC)
Have men really stopped reading? We take a deeper dive into the data (The Guardian)
In episode 222 of the Your Kid’s Next Read podcast, Megan Daley and I invited Dr Justin Coulson and author Matt Stanton in for a discussion about boys and reading. Why they’re not reading. What the effects of that are on their literacy levels (hint: not good). How we can encourage boys to read more.
The episode comes with the caveat that while recent research reported by the Australian Bureau of Statistics discovered that only around 10 per cent of Gen Z boys participated in ‘reading for pleasure’, it also found that only 13.1 per cent of girls did the same.
So the decline in reading is not just a ‘boy’ problem, and the wider discourse on kids and reading is something that Megan and I dive into every single week on the podcast.
But.
It feels different this time
Somehow, in the light of world events and consistent messaging around the effects of a steady diet of social media and screens on boys, this time those stats around boys and reading feel different.
Hence our decision to have that discussion on the podcast.
You can hear it here.
Of course, understanding some of the ‘why’ boys aren’t reading and getting some advice on ‘how’ to encourage it is only part of the equation.
Knowing which books to give them is the key.
How do you find the book that might make a kid who doesn’t identify as a ‘reader’ change his mind?
How do you make sure you have the ‘next’ book on hand for a kid who might have begun the journey?
To help, I asked the 38,000 members of the Your Kid’s Next Read Facebook community to tell me about the books their boys – of all ages – have read and loved this year. Tried-and-tested books.
And then I compiled a list to help you figure out what might work for your young reader. As you work through it, keep two things in mind:
• Understand your young reader.
Not all eight-year-old boys are alike – what does your particular young reader like to do? What level are they comfortable reading at (you’ll note some books appear in two different age groups for this reason)? Which books have they enjoyed in the past?
• Don’t be afraid to try something different.
If you’re not sure, head to your nearest library and borrow a selection of books to try out. The great thing about many of these recommendations is that they are series – which makes it easier to keep going if he loves the first one.
This list consists of recommendations from Your Kid’s Next Read members. Click the link to find out more about the title and its suitability for your young reader.*
125 books that boys are reading right now
5+
Ebb and Flo (series) by Laura + Philip Bunting
The Bad Guys (series) by Aaron Blabey
Minecraft (Young readers series)
Rainbow Magic Fairy (series) by Daisy Meadows and Georgie Ripper
Frog Squad (series) by Kate and Jol Temple, illustrated by Shiloh Gordon
Shower Land (series) by Nat Amoore, illustrated by James Hart
Zoe’s Rescue Zoo (series) by Amelia Cobb, illustrated by Sophy Williams
Detective Beans (graphic novel series) by Li Chen
The Super Adventures of Ollie and Bea (graphic novel series) by Renee Treml
7+
Fluff (series) by Matt Stanton
Little Lunch (series) by Danny Katz and Mitch Vane
Bunny vs Monkey (series) by Jamie Smart
Geronimo Stilton (series)
Showerland (series) by Nat Amoore, illustrated by James Hart
Specky Magee (series) by Felice Arena and Garry Lyon
The Bad Guys (series) by Aaron Blabey
Frog Squad (series) by Kate and Jol Temple, illustrated by Shiloh Gordon
Animorphs (graphic novel series) by Chris Grine and K. A. Applegate
Wings of Fire (series and graphic novel series) by Tui Sutherland
‘The Miraculous Journey of Edward Tulane’ by Kate DiCamillo
‘The Enormous Crocodile’ by Roald Dahl
The Oddmire (series) by William Ritter
Catwad (series) by Jim Benton
8+
The Worst Week Ever (series) by Eva Amores and Matt Cosgrove
Zombie Diaries (series) by Guy Edmonds, Matt Zeremes, Jake A. Minton
Funny Kid (series) by Matt Stanton
Tom Gates (series) by Liz Pichon
Bravepaw (series) by L.M. Wilkinson, illustrated by Lavanya Naidu
Max and the Midknights (series) by Lincoln Pierce
Harry Potter (series) by J. K. Rowling
Chronicles of Narnia (series) by C. S. Lewis
The Wingfeather Saga (series) by Andrew Peterson
‘Mr Bambuckles Remarkables’ by Tim Harris
The Last Kids on Earth (series) by Max Brallier and Douglas Holgate
Diary of a Wimpy Kid (series) by Jeff Kinney
Zoo Crew (series) by Matt Zeremes, Guy Edmonds, Peter Popple
Cowboy and Birdbrain (series) by Adam Wallace and James Hart
‘The Remarkables’ by Clotilde Perrin
Dog Man (series) by Dav Pilkey
Frog, Log & Dave (graphic novel series) by Trent Jamieson and Brent Wilson
Ducky The Spy (graphic novel series) by Sean E. Avery
Animal Ark (series) by Lucy Daniels
‘The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Peculiar Pairs In Nature’ by Sami Bayly
‘Creature Clinic: A Graphic Novel’ by Gavin Aung Than
Horrible Histories (series) by Terry Deary and Martin Brown
Terrible True Tales (series) by Terry Deary
9+
Nerd Herd (series) by Nathan Luff and Chris Kennett
Nanny Piggins (series) by R. A. Spratt
The Naughtiest Girl (series) by Enid Blyton
Runt (series) by Craig Silvey
Impossible Creatures (series) by Katherine Rundell
‘The Midwatch’ by Judith Rossell
Specky Magee (series) by Felice Arena and Garry Lyons
Diary of a Wimpy Kid (series) by Jeff Kinney
The Girl and The Ghost (series) by Jacqueline Harvey
The Famous Five (series) by Enid Blyton
How to Train Your Dragon (series) by Cressida Cowell
‘The Invention of Hugo Cabret’ by Brian Selznick
Percy Jackson (graphic novels seires) by Rick Riordan (Robert Venditti, Attila Futaki, Jose Villarrubia)
‘Super Sleuth’ by David Walliams
Exploding Endings (series) by Tim Harris
Garfield (series) by Jim Davis
Skulduggery Pleasant (series) by Derek Landy
10+
City Spies (series) by James Ponti
‘Danger Road’ by A. L. Tait
‘Scar Town’ by Tristan Bancks
‘Run’ by Sarah Armstrong
‘We RunTomorrow’ by Nat Amoore and Mike Barry
The Land of Stories (series) by Chris Colfer
Skulduggery Pleasant (series) by Derek Landy
Magicalia (series) by Jennifer Bell
‘Two Wolves’ by Tristan Bancks
Keeper of the Lost Cities (series) by Shannon Messenger
Deltora Quest (series) by Emily Rodda
Runt (series) by Craig Silvey
The Mapmaker Chronicles (series) by A. L. Tait
Rowan of Rin (series) by Emily Rodda
‘The Christmas Pig’ by J. K. Rowling
‘The Ickabog’ by J. K.Rowling
‘Small Wonder’ by Ross Montgomery
I Survived (series), various authors, various formats
The Ranger’s Apprentice (series) by John Flanagan
Brotherband (series) by John Flanagan
Football Superstars (series) by Simon Mugford and Dan Green
The Crossover (series) by Kwame Alexander
Alex Rider (series) by Anthony Horowitz
Once (series) by Morris Gleitzman
‘We Are Wolves’ by Katrina Nannestad
Adventures in Time (series) by Dominic Sandbrook
Manga: Jujutsu Kaisen (series) by Gege Akutami
Manga: Naruto (series) by Masashi Kishimoto
Eragon (series) by Christopher Paolini
Manga: One Piece (series) by Elichiro Oda
Adventure Collection (series) by Enid Blyton
12+
‘The Locked Room’ by Adam Cece
Asterix (series) by Rene Goscinny and Albert Uderzo
Peanuts (series) by Charles M. Schultz
Calvin and Hobbes (series)
Villain (series) by Adrian Beck
‘Refugee’ by Alan Gratz (and other Alan Gratz books)
CHERUB (series) by Robert Muchamore
Spy Academy (series) by Jack Heath
‘Inked’ by Karen Wasson and Jake A. Minton
‘Ghosts’ by Raina Telgemeir (and other Raina Telgemeir graphic novels)
‘Chicken Pox’ by Remy Lai (and other Remy Lai graphic novels)
Alex Rider (graphic novel series) by Anthony Horowitz, Antony Johnson, Kanako, Yuzuru
‘Danger Road’ by A. L. Tait
Sunderworld (series) by Ransom Riggs
Loki (series) by Louie Stowell
Elston-Fright Tales (series) by Reece Carter
‘Run’ by Sarah Armstrong
The Hunger Games (series) by Suzanne Collins
‘The Girl With All The Gifts’ by M. R. Carey
‘Rescue’ by Jennifer A. Nielsen
Adventures On Trains (series) by M. G. Leonard, Sam Sedgman, Elisa Paganelli
Young Bond (series) by Charlie Higson
Lockwood and Co (series) by Jonathan Stroud
Thedore Boone (series) by John Grisham
Tomorrow (series) by John Marsden
The Maze Runner (series) by James Dashner
Skyward (series) by Brandon Sanderson
14+
‘Shoe Dog’ by Phil Knight
‘A Tale of Two Cities’ by Charles Dickens
‘Horse’ by Geraldine Brooks
‘The Hobbit’ by J. R. R. Tolkien
Red Rising (series) by Pierce Brown
Dungeon Crawler Carl (series) by Matt Dinniman
He Who Fights With Monsters (series) by Shirtaloon
Dune (graphic novel series) by Brian Herbert
‘The Giver’ by Lois Lowry
‘The Happiest Man on Earth’ by Eddie Jaku
*This post contains affiliate links. See contact page for details.
You might also like:
50 (Mostly) New Adventure Books for Kids
Mystery Novels For Tweens
60 more tried-and-tested books for 13/14-year-old boys
YKNR Fave Reads 2024: Young Adult
Are you new here? Welcome to my blog!
I’m Allison Tait, aka A.L. Tait, and I’m the author of 11 middle-grade novels, including adventure fantasy series such as The Mapmaker Chronicles, The Ateban Cipher, and the Maven & Reeve Mysteries, and contemporary stories including THE FIRST SUMMER OF CALLIE McGEE, WILLOW BRIGHT’S SECRET PLOT and DANGER ROAD.
You can find out more about me here, and more about my books here.
If you’re looking for book recommendations for young readers, join the Your Kid’s Next Read Facebook community, tune in to the Your Kid’s Next Read podcast and sign up for the Your Kid’s Next Read newsletter.
by Allison Tait | Jul 28, 2025 | Blog, Books, Reading, Your Kid's Next Read
What does adventure mean to you?
This year’s CBCA Book Week theme is ‘Book An Adventure’ and it got the Your Kid’s Next Read team thinking about the many different types of adventure stories there are – and the many brilliant adventure books for kids out there that tell them.
From epic fantasy adventure stories to contemporary survival stories to science fiction and more, adventure books for kids cover all genres and all age groups from picture books to young adult.
We’ve put together a list of (mostly) new adventure stories – (mostly) because there were a few older favourites suggested by the YKNR community, and some we couldn’t leave off either.
Whether you’re looking for inspiration for a CBCA Book Week costume, or something new for your young reader, you’ll find everything here from heart-pounding thrillers to beautiful picture books to stories that incorporate romance (surely one of the greatest adventures of all?), fantasy and even a zombie or two.
Click book titles to find out more about the book or to buy* a copy.
Adventure books for kids of all ages
Picture books
‘One Day’ by Shirley Marr, Illustrated by Michael Speechley
‘George Goes to the Farm’ by Sinead Saint
‘Adventures on the Dreaming Path’ by Paul Callaghan, illustrated by Dylan Finney
‘Quest’ by Aaron Becker
‘Beware The Deep, Dark Forest’ by Sue Whiting, illustrated by Annie White
‘A Little Stuck’ by Oliver Jeffers
‘The Colt From Old Regret’ by Dianne Wolfer & Erica Wagner
‘The Girl and the Mermaid’ by Hollie Hughes and Sarah Massini
‘Mango and Hopscotch: The Inspiring Story of a Brave Kangaroo and her Joey Rescued from Floodwaters’ by Sophie Cunningham, illustrated by Anil Tortop
‘Alexander’s Outing’ (board book) by Pamela Allen
‘We Live In A Bus’ by Dave Petzold
‘South With The Seabirds’ by Jess McGeachin
Junior Fiction
‘Showerland’ (series) by Nat Amoore, illustrated by James Hart
‘Junkyard Fairies’ (series) Edwina Wyatt, illustrated by Lauren O’Hara
‘Detective Galileo’ by Peter Helliar, illustrated by Andrew Joyner
‘Detective Beans’ (series) by Li Chen
‘Tawny Trouble’ by Deb Fitzpatrick
‘Tashi’ (series) by Anna and Barbara Fienberg and Kim Gamble
‘Cat on the Run’ by Aaron Blabey
‘Frog Squad’ (series) by Kate & Jol Temple, illustrated by Shiloh Gordon
‘The Marvellous Submarine’ by Clayton Zane Comber and Conor McCammon
‘Sunny & Shadow’ by Helen Milroy
Bravepaw (series) by L.M. Wilkinson. Illustrated by Lavanya Naidi
‘Miss Penny Dreadful’ (series) by Allison Rushby
‘Ducky The Spy’ (series) by Sean E. Avery
‘Secret Agent Mole’ (series) by James Foley
Middle Grade
‘The Silken Thread’ by Gabrielle Wang
‘Into the Bewilderness’ by Gus Gordon
‘The Last Journey’ by Stacy Gregg
‘Spy Academy’ (series) by Jack Heath
‘Danger Road’ by A. L. Tait
‘Big Trouble’ (series) by Lachlan Carter and Douglas Holgate
‘I Survived’ (series, various authors)
‘Villain’ by Adrian Beck
‘Run’ by Sarah Armstrong
‘How To Sail To Somewhere’ by Ashleigh Barton
The Mapmaker Chronicles (series) by A. L. Tait
‘Ghostlines’ by Katya Balen
‘Jungle Escape’ by Nathan Luff
‘When This Bell Rings’ by Allison Rushby
‘The First Summer of Callie McGee’ by A. L. Tait
‘Wylah The Koorie Warrior’ (series) by Jordan Gould and Richard Pritchard
‘Wildsmith: Into the Dark Forest’ by Liz Flanagan, illustrated by Joe Todd-Stanton
‘We are Wolves’ by Katrina Nannestad
‘Spirit of the Crocodile’ by Aaron Fa’Aoso, Michelle Scott Tucker, with Lyn White
‘The Surface Trials’ by H. M. Waugh
Young Adult
‘Lady’s Knight’ by Amie Kaufman and Meagan Spooner
‘Of Flame and Fury’ by Mikayla Bridge
‘Divine Rivals’ by Rebecca Ross
‘The Lovely and the Lost’ by Jennifer Lynn Barnes
‘We Saw What You Started’ by Carla Salmon
‘Into The Wild’ by Hayley Lawrence
‘Tracks Of The Missing’ by Carl Merrison and Hakea Hustler
‘Into the Mouth of the Wolf’ by Erin Gough
‘We Won’t All Survive’ by Kate Alice Marshall
‘Liar’s Test’ by Ambelin Kwaymullina
‘Wandering Wild’ by Lynette Noni
‘Sunny At The End Of The World’ by Steph Bowe
Are you new here? Welcome to my blog!
I’m Allison Tait, aka A.L. Tait, and I’m the author of 11 middle-grade novels, including adventure fantasy series such as The Mapmaker Chronicles, The Ateban Cipher, and the Maven & Reeve Mysteries, and contemporary stories including THE FIRST SUMMER OF CALLIE McGEE, WILLOW BRIGHT’S SECRET PLOT and DANGER ROAD (July 25).
You can find out more about me here, and more about my books here.
If you’re looking for book recommendations for young readers, join the Your Kid’s Next Read Facebook community, tune in to the Your Kid’s Next Read podcast and sign up for the Your Kid’s Next Read newsletter.
*This post contains affiliate links – see contact page for details.
by Allison Tait | Jun 16, 2025 | Blog, My books, Reading, Writing, Your Kid's Next Read
I’m in the middle of preparing author talks and workshops for ‘Danger Road‘, my cold-case crime thriller for middle-grade readers, launching on 1 July.
It’s always so interesting to sit down and consider exactly where ideas for stories come from and how they go from a glimmer of curiosity into a full-blown world, peopled by three-dimensional characters living their lives and getting themselves into various situations and scrapes. Trying to explain HOW that happens is not an easy task and it’s often only in looking back and preparing to talk about it with young readers that I’m able to clarify it for myself.
I’m not a person who creates ‘mood boards’ or uses Pinterest for visual prompts for stories. It’s just not how my subconscious operates. So it’s only when I’m creating a slide presentation for my author talks that I’m confronted by the reality that today’s students really like visuals. They’re a screen generation.
And so I find myself scratching around trying to find images that evoke the feeling of the book and the incidents or moments that inspired it.
These are some of the photos* I came up with for ‘Danger Road’.


None of these photos on their own shows up in the book. But all of them feed into the lives of Alex and Leo Hawkins and their friends in Grayton, the regional town in which they live. Creating a great mystery story is not just about the puzzle at the heart of the novel, but about the world in which that puzzle is set. And, for me, big worlds – be they fantasy or contemporary – are built on tiny details.
Alex and Leo set out to solve a 25-year-old hit-and-run cold case, and the details of that puzzle unfold along with the story. But the details of their daily lives and the lives of those around them are there from the opening sentence, building a picture word by word, of a place and the people who live there.
It’s a world of teenagers – then and now – in a place that’s not quite the city, not quite the coast, not quite the deep country. It’s about friendships and relationships – first love, family, the people around us – and about the difference between who we are and who the world thinks we are.
And it’s about the ripple effects of tragedy within a community.
Creating characters – and a crime
When I think back to the very early days of writing the novel – and the first glimmers began three or four years ago – I was thinking mostly of the characters of Alex and Leo – I wanted to write a detective story about two brothers.
I had written a junior fiction novel about two very different brothers – a book that will become one of my contributions to the Your Next Read series in 2027. But the kind of story I had in mind this time around was older, and definitely grittier.
So I started jotting down ideas, just in the usual way – opening a doc on my computer and throwing in half-considered sentences, links to articles or images. I knew I wanted two boys, close in age, but world’s apart in interest and personality.
In early 2023, author Adrian Beck and I had a brainstorming session about a book we thought we might write together – he was interested in writing a detective story as well. But he was working on something else, as was I, and we didn’t get much further than the brainstorm and talking about how much fun it would be to write something together.
Then in 2024, after I finished writing ‘Willow Bright’s Secret Plot’, I got in touch with Adrian and said, ‘I’m writing my own.’ He told me to ‘go for it’, and off I went.
Crime in a middle-grade novel can be difficult, so finding the right puzzle for the boys to solve took time to come into focus. But hit-and-run incidents are reported with horrifying regularity in Australian newspapers – there have been four in Sydney just in the past fortnight. These days they are mostly solved quickly, thanks to CCTV and other technology, but that hasn’t always been the case.
As someone who lives outside the major cities, I know that regional roads can be dark, lonely places, and the idea that a car, something we take for granted in everyday life, can also be a weapon is something that I did my best to make my own kids aware of as I was teaching them to drive.
That the decisions we make have consequences.
It’s an important reminder in a world where games like Grand Theft Auto have ‘mission’ called ‘Hit and Run’ and you can find clips on YouTube devoted to players ‘running over’ pedestrians.
Mostly, though, I wrote, in ‘Danger Road’, the kind of novel I love to read and have always loved to read. A pacy, plot-driven story with a thorny puzzle at its centre.
The first review in Books + Publishing (6 May) by Karys McEwen described ‘Danger Road’ as “… a compelling standalone mystery about a cold case, small-town secrets, and the difficulties surrounding sibling dynamics”, with “an emotional depth that always feels grounded and accessible.”
Reviewer Paul McDonald said, “I loved ‘Danger Road’ … [it] is compelling, the characters completely believable, the tone is dark and moody and the pace is thrilling. The novel is perfectly pitched for readers 10 plus, gritty but absolutely right for those readers transitioning towards teen fiction. Tait knows how to write for her young readers- and upper primary and lower secondary readers will fall so easily into the pages of ‘Danger Road’. … We need to be offering stories like this one that hook the reader from chapter 1. 



“
Fingers crossed that young readers will love it too!
Find out more about ‘Danger Road’ and buy it here.
*With thanks to B. Thomas-McKnight for the river shots
Are you new here? Welcome to my blog!
I’m Allison Tait, aka A.L. Tait, and I’m the author of 11 middle-grade novels, including adventure fantasy series such as The Mapmaker Chronicles, The Ateban Cipher, and the Maven & Reeve Mysteries, and contemporary stories including THE FIRST SUMMER OF CALLIE McGEE, WILLOW BRIGHT’S SECRET PLOT and DANGER ROAD (July 25).
You can find out more about me here, and more about my books here.
If you’re looking for book recommendations for young readers, join the Your Kid’s Next Read Facebook community, tune in to the Your Kid’s Next Read podcast and sign up for the Your Kid’s Next Read newsletter.
by Allison Tait | May 21, 2025 | Blog, Books, Reading, Your Kid's Next Read
Romance is in the air in all aspects of publishing and all over BookTok, and it seems that tween readers can’t get enough of it – giving the adults in their lives the tough job of finding age-appropriate reads.
The number of requests for recommendations in the Your Kid’s Next Read community in this area continues to grow and we are very lucky to have author members with expertise to help.
Author Danielle Binks (latest novel ‘Six Summers Of Tash And Leopold‘) jumped into the breach last year with some lists of recommended reads, and then summarised them here in this thread. It’s definitely worth a look.
Also worth a look is Danielle’s terrific post on Substack here about YA romance novels, including history, context and a huge list of book recommendations and swap-outs for those BookTok sensations that are more ‘adult’ than ‘young adult’. Note, some are suitable for readers aged 13-14, some are more the 14+ ballpark, but you know your young reader best.
And have a listen to episode 144 of the Your Kid’s Next Read podcast and read the show notes here. Megan and I discuss books for kids about love in all it’s various forms, and there are links to other book lists as well.
But to get you started, here’s a list of novels recommended by the Your Kid’s Next Read community and/or Team YKNR with suggested reading ages. Click the links* to find out more about each book.
For more inspiration or for something specific, jump into the Your Kid’s Next Read group and ask for recommendations that might suit your young reader.
Romance novels for tweens
11+
‘Sonny & Tess’ by Nova Weetman
‘The Girl and The Ghost’ by Jacqueline Harvey
Anne of Green Gables (series) by L. M. Montgomery
‘The First Summer Of Callie McGee’ by A. L. Tait
‘Stargirl’ by Jerry Spinelli
‘Well, That Was Awkward’ by Rachel Vail
‘Girl, Crushed’ by Maggie Horne
12+
The Summer I Turned Pretty (series) by Jenny Han
‘Along For The Ride’ by Sarah Dessen
‘Batter Royale’ by Leisl Adams
‘Crumbs’ by Danie Stirling
The Lunar Chronicles (series) by Marissa Meyer
‘A Far Wilder Magic’ by Allison Saft
‘Tweet Cute’ by Emma Lord
‘This Time It’s Real’ by Ann Liang
13+
Heartstopper (series) by Alice Oseman
‘You Should See Me In A Crown’ by Leah Johnson
‘Geekerella’ by Ashley Poston
The Prison Healer (series) by Lynette Noni
‘Eleanor and Park’ by Rainbow Rowell
‘A Season For Scandal’ by Laura Wood
14+
‘Rival Darling’ by Alexandra Moody
‘Grumpy Darling’ by Alexandra Moody
‘Stuck Up and Stupid’ by Angourie Rice and Kate Rice
‘Wandering Wild’ by Lynette Noni
‘The Ballad of Darcy and Russell’ by Morgan Matson
‘It Sounded Better In My Head’ by Nina Kenwood
‘The Unexpected Mess Of It All’ by Gabrielle Tozer
Are you new here? Welcome to my blog!
I’m Allison Tait, aka A.L. Tait, and I’m the author of 11 middle-grade novels, including adventure fantasy series such as The Mapmaker Chronicles, The Ateban Cipher, and the Maven & Reeve Mysteries, and contemporary stories including THE FIRST SUMMER OF CALLIE McGEE, WILLOW BRIGHT’S SECRET PLOT and DANGER ROAD.
You can find out more about me here, and more about my books here.
If you’re looking for book recommendations for young readers, join the Your Kid’s Next Read Facebook community, tune in to the Your Kid’s Next Read podcast and sign up for the Your Kid’s Next Read newsletter
*this post contains affiliate links. See contact page for details
by Allison Tait | May 20, 2025 | Blog, Books, Reading, Your Kid's Next Read
I talk a lot about mystery novels for tweens.
Whether I’m at school visits or literary festivals or on the Your Kid’s Next Read podcast, it’s a subject close to my heart – probably because there’s usually a mystery, if not at the heart, then not far from it in most of my books.
I’ve always loved reading mysteries – to this day – and I love writing them.
My Maven & Reeve novels are detective stories set in a world of knights and castles.
The First Summer of Callie McGee and Willow Bright’s Secret Plot are cosy mysteries wrapped in coming-of-age stories.
Danger Road, coming in July, features two brothers trying to solve a cold-case mystery that comes a little too close to home.
Even my fantasy adventure series, The Mapmaker Chronicles and The Ateban Cipher, hold mysteries at their hearts – because curiosity drives my writing and nothing drives a story better than a big question.
And, if the number of requests for ‘mystery novels’ for tweens in the Your Kid’s Next Read community is anything to go by, I’m not alone in my obsession.
Megan Daley and I recently had a discussion about the enduring appeal of mystery stories in this podcast episode, and it was at that point that I realised that a) not only did I not have an updated list of terrific mystery novels for readers 9-14 but b) I didn’t have a list here on my site at all.
Over the years I’ve written lots of different book lists full of terrific mystery reads (see some of them here) for other people’s websites and blogs, but not one for my own.
I know.
Anyway, I’m rectifying that here with a list of books that are either recommended over and over in the Your Kid’s Next Read community, are recommended over and over by Megan and/or I, or are new and exciting and will not doubt be recommended over and over in the months and years to come.
You might need a cup of tea for this one because it’s not going to be a short list.
Mystery novels for tweens
I’ve loosely divided it into three sections, just to help us all keep track, but there remains a wide range of books under each heading, from gentle detective stories to murder mysteries, so click the links* to check the descriptions to ascertain suitability for your young reader.
Detective stories
Friday Barnes (series) by R. A. Spratt
‘Copycat’ by Kelli Ann Hawkins
‘The First Summer Of Callie McGee’ by A. L. Tait
‘Willow Bright’s Secret Plot’ by A. L. Tait
Solve It Your Way (series) by Rachel Jackson
Murder Most Unladylike (series) by Robin Stevens
Enola Holmes (series) by Nancy Springer
Stella Montgomery Intrigue (series) by Judith Rossell
‘Miss Penny Dreadful and The Midnight Kittens’ (series) by Allison Rushby, Bronte Rose Marando
Kat Wolfe Investigates (series) by Lauren St John
The London Eye Mystery (series) by Siobhan Dowd
Agatha Oddly (series) by Lena Jones
Flavia De Luce (series) by Alan Bradley
‘The Very Merry Murder Club’ (anthology), edited by Serena Patel and Robin Stevens
The Swifts (series) by Beth Lincoln, Claire Powell
The Winterhouse Mysteries (series) by Ben Guterson
‘Adventures on Trains’ (series) by M.G. Leonard, Sam Sedgman, Elsa Paganelli
‘The Detective’s Guide To Ocean Travel’ (series) by Nikki Greenberg
‘Montgomery BonBon: Murder At The Museum’ (series) by Alasdair Beckett-King, Claire Powell
‘Poppy Pym’ (series) by Laura Wood
A Girl Called Justice (series) by Elly Griffiths
Scarlet and Ivy (series) by Sophie Cleverly
Rose Raventhorpe Investigates (series) by Janine Beacham
Ella at Eden (series) by Laura Sieveking
‘Her Majesty’s League of Remarkable Young Ladies’ by Alison D. Stegert
‘When This Bell Rings’ by Allison Rushby
200 Minutes of Mystery (series) by Jack Heath
Mystery thrillers
‘Scar Town’ by Tristan Bancks
‘The Fall’ by Tristan Bancks’
‘Danger Road’ by A. L. Tait
‘Villain’ by Adrian Beck
‘Missing’ by Sue Whiting
Theodore Boone (series) by John Grisham
‘The Book Of Chance’ by Sue Whiting
‘Into The Wild’ by Hayley Lawrence
City Spies (series) by James Ponti
Spy Academy (series) by Jack Heath
‘Runner’ by Robert Newton
Young Bond (series) by Charlie Higson
YA mysteries for tweens (12+)
Eleanor Jones Is Not A Murderer (series) by Amy Doak
The Fire Star (Maven & Reeve Mysteries #1) (series) by A. L. Tait
‘The Stand In’ by A. J. Rushby
Truly Devious (series) by Maureen Johnson
‘Tracks of the Missing’ by Carl Merrison and Hakea Hustler
‘Medici Heist’ by Caitlin Scheiderhan
‘Storm Of Lies’ by Sophie McKenzie
‘Trapped’ by Sophie McKenzie
‘My Family And Other Suspects’ by Kate Emery’
‘If You Tell Anyone, You’re Next’ by Jack Heath
A Good Girl’s Guide To Murder (series) by Holly Jackson
The Inheritance Games (series) by Jennifer Lynn Barnes
‘Watch Your Back’ by Sue Wallman
Are you new here? Welcome to my blog!
I’m Allison Tait, aka A.L. Tait, and I’m the author of 11 middle-grade novels, including epic adventure fantasy series such as The Mapmaker Chronicles, The Ateban Cipher, and the Maven & Reeve Mysteries, and contemporary stories including THE FIRST SUMMER OF CALLIE McGEE, WILLOW BRIGHT’S SECRET PLOT and DANGER ROAD (July).
You can find out more about me here, and more about my books here.
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