The Cardboard Kingdom
by Chad Sell · The Cardboard Kingdom #1
A neighborhood of kids turn cardboard into a kingdom — and each other into friends.
The story
Ten children in one suburban neighborhood each invent a cardboard persona — a Sorceress, a Knight, a Beast, a Big Banshee, a Blacksmith, a mad potioneer — and their overlapping vignettes build a vibrant, inclusive kingdom where identity is something you choose and friendship is something you build. Written and drawn by Chad Sell with ten collaborating authors, it weaves ten short arcs into a single finale where the kids must unite against a monster one of their own has unknowingly created.
Age verdict
Best for ages 8-11. Accessible down to 7 with parent support; still enjoyed at 12-13 for the art and warmth.
Our take
teacher_darling_with_creative_spark
What stands out
Each audience's top 3 dimensions. Out of 30 scored per book.
Kids love
- Character voice Strong
Each of the ten cardboard personas has a distinct voice — Sophie shouts 'I AM THE BIG BANSHEE!', Nolan speaks in deadpan robot pronouncements ('Foolish humans...'), Alice talks like a 1930s business tycoon, Miguel narrates like a storybook knight. This choral voicing is stronger than Sunny Side Up (6, single protagonist) and approaches Babymouse (8, signature voice) for memorability.
- Playground quotability & cool factor Strong
Cardboard personas, hand-drawn weapons, the idea of turning a neighborhood into a kingdom — these are directly replicable and kids DO act on them (teachers regularly report cardboard projects after read-alongs). The cool factor is high. Approaches Dog Man (9, catchphrases everywhere) — more craft-inspiring than quotable, but genuinely playground-transformative.
Parents love
- Creative spark Exceptional
This is the book's top-tier achievement. It is LITERALLY a book about creative play with cardboard — every vignette models a kid inventing a persona from household materials, and teachers/parents report children immediately launching cardboard projects after reading. Maxes the attribute in a way only a handful of titles can — rivals Rosie Revere, Engineer (10, maker-spirit anchor) for pure creative-spark ignition.
- Stereotype-breaker Exceptional
The book's most powerful dimension: an expansive cast that includes a boy who wants to be a princess (Miguel), a gender-questioning character, a Black lead knight (Shikha), Dominican heritage woven through Amanda's arc, body-diversity across the cast, a loud girl celebrated for being loud. Rivals New Kid (9) and George (9) for stereotype-breaking; operates at the top tier with Last Stop on Market Street.
Teachers love
- Writing prompt potential Exceptional
Obvious writing prompt engine — 'design your own cardboard persona,' 'write your character's origin story,' 'draft the next chapter' — and the ensemble structure invites students to pick a POV. Stronger than Dog Man (6) for writing prompts; comparable to Roller Girl (8) and approaches Wonder (9) at the upper band.
- Empathy & self-awareness Exceptional
Empathy and self-awareness is where this book excels. Ten characters each invite readers to see a different kind of kid from the inside — the lonely one, the loud one, the intellectual who can't feel, the kid whose creative vision isn't valued. Approaches Wonder (10, empathy ceiling) and rivals New Kid (9) for perspective-taking training.
✓ Perfect for
- • reluctant readers
- • kids who love imaginative play
- • classrooms teaching identity and belonging
- • children seeing themselves reflected in diverse characters
- • fans of New Kid or El Deafo
Not ideal for
Readers who want a single continuous plot or prose-density chapter books may find the anthology structure fragmented.
⚠ Heads up
At a glance
- Pages
- 288
- Chapters
- 10
- Words
- 12k
- Lexile
- GN150L
- Difficulty
- Easy
- POV
- Third Person Limited
- Illustration
- Fully Illustrated
- Published
- 2018
- Illustrator
- Chad Sell
Mood & style
You'll know it worked when…
Completes its promise beautifully — every vignette resolves and the finale unites them all.
If your kid loved "The Cardboard Kingdom"
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.
Emmy in the Key of Code
by Aimee Lucido
Same genre (realistic fiction). Both hopeful in tone
Class Act
by Jerry Craft
Same genre (realistic fiction). Both hopeful in tone
Criss Cross
by Lynne Rae Perkins
Same genre (realistic fiction). Same pacing (measured)
El Deafo
by Cece Bell
Same genre (realistic fiction). Same pacing (measured)
Every Soul a Star
by Wendy Mass
Same genre (realistic fiction). Same pacing (measured)
Be Prepared
by Vera Brosgol
Same genre (realistic fiction). Same pacing (measured)
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