Anyone But Me
by Nancy E. Krulik · Katie Kazoo, Switcheroo #1
A magical wish teaches a third-grader that understanding someone else's experience changes everything.
The story
When Katie Carew has the worst day of third grade — missing a football catch, landing in mud, and earning a cruel nickname from class bully George — she wishes she could be anyone but herself. A magical wind grants her wish in the most unexpected way, giving Katie a completely different perspective on school and the people around her, including the bully who made her miserable.
Age verdict
Best for ages 6-9. The bullying is realistic but age-appropriate, and the resolution models empathy without being preachy. A safe, warm read for early chapter-book readers.
Our take
A warm, effective reading gateway with strong empathy curriculum value but limited vocabulary stretch and literary depth.
What stands out
Each audience's top 3 dimensions. Out of 30 scored per book.
Kids love
- First-chapter grab Strong
Katie's football miss and mud humiliation on page one drop readers into immediate social stakes with zero setup — action-first opening stronger than Princess in Black (4, party/monster alternation) but without the multi-layered criminal-operation intrigue of Artemis Fowl (10); closest match is All the Broken Pieces (7, immediate mystery and emotional stakes), achieving its hook through relatable embarrassment rather than literary mystery.
- Middle momentum Strong
The story never pauses — Ch.3's wish triggers Ch.4's transformation, and location changes every chapter (cage to classroom to hallway to locker room) prevent staleness. Momentum comparable to Breakout (7, ticking-clock sustaining forward pull) though driven by physical jeopardy and curiosity rather than timeline pressure. Stronger than Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Hard Luck (6) because every chapter ends with genuine forward pull.
Parents love
- Reading gateway Strong
Exceptionally well-designed as a chapter-book on-ramp: 80 pages, 10 short chapters, Scholastic book-fair presence, irresistible magic hook, and illustrated throughout. One of the most effective gateways for 7-9 year olds transitioning from easy readers — the transformation premise conquers reluctance that realistic school stories cannot. Similar to A Bear Called Paddington (8, short illustrated chapters, accessible vocabulary, episodic structure) — among the strongest gateway books available for emerging chapter-book readers.
- Moral reasoning Solid
Katie grapples with whether to tell her parents about bullying (Ch.3), recognizes her own capacity for meanness when George is terrified (Ch.6), and chooses to befriend her bully despite genuine past pain (Ch.9-10). Age-appropriate moral complexities presented through action rather than lecture. Similar to A Tale Dark and Grimm (6, genuinely difficult moral questions without easy answers) — both trust young readers with real ethical ambiguity.
Teachers love
- Empathy & self-awareness Strong
The book's empathy lesson is its strongest pedagogical feature. Katie's shame teaches bullying's weight (Ch.3), George's terror despite bullying teaches that toughness masks fear (Ch.6), and Katie's choice to extend kindness teaches that understanding transforms relationships (Ch.9). Similar to Clementine, Friend of the Week (7, learning to see past surface behavior) — empathy through character observation.
- Reluctant reader rescue Strong
Short chapters, 80-page length, magic element, action-driven plot, and relatable embarrassment hook reluctant readers at the 7-9 range. The transformation premise appeals to readers who find realistic school stories slow. Scholastic book-fair availability increases accessibility. Similar to Alma (7, picture-book format removes all barriers) — effective on-ramps through different mechanisms.
✓ Perfect for
- • kids transitioning from easy readers to chapter books
- • readers who enjoy magical transformation stories
- • children navigating school bullying or social anxiety
- • fans of funny school stories with heart
Not ideal for
Readers looking for complex fantasy world-building or challenging vocabulary will find this too simple; older middle-grade readers (10+) may find the social dynamics basic.
⚠ Heads up
At a glance
- Pages
- 80
- Chapters
- 10
- Words
- 9k
- Lexile
- 530L
- Difficulty
- Easy
- POV
- Third Person Limited
- Illustration
- Sparse
- Published
- 2002
- Illustrator
- John & Wendy
Mood & style
You'll know it worked when…
Katie returns from her transformation and the school day continues with a new friendship forming.
If your kid loved "Anyone But Me"
Matched across 30 dimensions — interest hooks, character appeal, tone, pacing, emotional core. Not by what other people bought. By what fits the same reader profile.
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Dream On
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fantasy as secondary genre. Same pacing (steady clip)
Eva and the Lost Pony: A Branches Book (Owl Diaries #8)
by Rebecca Elliott
fantasy as secondary genre. Both warm in tone
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