My Dog Is Better Than Your Dog
by Tommy Greenwald · Crimebiters! #1
A funny, fast-paced mystery about a boy, his possibly-supernatural dog, and the courage to be yourself
The story
When Jimmy Bishop gets a mysterious rescue dog named Abby just before starting fifth grade, he discovers she has some very unusual habits — sleeping all day, prowling at night, and running from garlic. As Jimmy navigates school bullies, new friendships, and a suspicious babysitter, Abby's strange behavior leads the kids into a real neighborhood mystery that tests their bravery and bonds them as friends.
Age verdict
Best for ages 8-10. Humor and accessibility make it a strong gateway book for developing readers.
Our take
Entertainment-forward humor-mystery with strong kid appeal but moderate educational depth
What stands out
Each audience's top 3 dimensions. Out of 30 scored per book.
Kids love
- First-chapter grab Strong
The opening chapter hooks immediately with a relatable personal crisis — a birthmark appearing before fifth grade — followed by a dog-adoption promise that creates genuine forward pull. Stronger than Sunny Rolls the Dice (5, anxious-quiz opening) through dual personal-and-promise hooks, comparable to All the Broken Pieces (7, immediate emotional stakes through verse).
- Middle momentum Strong
A compressed four-day timeline with escalating stakes — bullying, friendship complications, suspicious babysitter, rooftop crime discovery — sustains forward pull without sagging. Each chapter ends with unresolved tension. Comparable to Breakout (7, ticking-clock forward momentum) through natural question-stacking rather than artificial cliffhangers.
Parents love
- Reading gateway Strong
Short timestamped sections, consistent humor, a relatable protagonist with appearance anxiety, and a dog-mystery hook create multiple entry points for reluctant or developing readers. Comparable to Clementine, Friend of the Week (7, short chapters with conversational voice and illustrations) in combining accessibility features that lower barriers to independent reading.
- Moral reasoning Solid
Jimmy engages in genuine ethical thinking — separating a child's worth from a parent's crimes, choosing compassion over revenge when defending the boy who bullied him. Comparable to Mercy Watson: Something Wonky This Way Comes (5, understanding needs over controlling behavior) in embedding moral reasoning within story action.
Teachers love
- Reluctant reader rescue Strong
Fast pacing, frequent humor, a dog-and-mystery hook, short illustrated sections, and a protagonist who watches TV and avoids reading create strong entry points for reluctant readers. Comparable to Alma and How She Got Her Name (7, picture-book format removing every barrier) in actively reducing reading resistance through multiple accessibility features.
- Read-aloud power Solid
Dialogue-heavy sections with distinct character voices read aloud naturally, and Jimmy's direct-address narration is performable with personality. The humor translates well to oral delivery. Comparable to A Court of Mist and Fury (6, rhythmically strong with performable dialogue) in providing read-aloud potential through voice-driven prose.
✓ Perfect for
- • Dog lovers who want a funny mystery
- • Reluctant readers who need short, illustrated chapters
- • Kids aged 8-10 who enjoy Diary of a Wimpy Kid or Dog Man
- • Readers who like humor mixed with real friendship stories
Not ideal for
Readers looking for complex plots, literary prose, or intense emotional depth — this is a light, fun series starter
⚠ Heads up
At a glance
- Pages
- 208
- Chapters
- 4
- Words
- 28k
- Lexile
- 590L
- Difficulty
- Easy
- POV
- First Person
- Illustration
- Moderate
- Published
- 2015
- Publisher
- Scholastic Press
- Illustrator
- Adam Stower
- ISBN
- 9780545773324
Mood & style
You'll know it worked when…
Series: Book 1 of 3 in the Crimebiters! series. Standalone-enjoyable with an open mystery thread.
If your kid loved "My Dog Is Better Than Your Dog"
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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Same genre (mystery). Same pacing (steady clip)
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Both comedic in tone. Same pacing (steady clip)
Cam Jansen: The Mystery of the U.F.O.
by David A. Adler
Same genre (mystery). Same pacing (steady clip)
Absolutely Truly
by Heather Vogel Frederick
Same genre (mystery). Same pacing (steady clip)
Nate the Great and the Wandering Word
by Marjorie Weinman Sharmat and Andrew Sharmat
Same genre (mystery). Same pacing (steady clip)
In a Class by Himself
by Lincoln Peirce
Both comedic in tone. Same pacing (steady clip)
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