Read after

What to read after
"Going Solo"

Your kid finished Going Solo. Here are 8 books matched across 30 dimensions — not by what other people bought.

Cover of Going Solo

The book they finished

Going Solo

by Roald Dahl

A Master Storyteller's True Account of Adventure, War, and Survival — Roald Dahl's Underrated Memoir

Kid 73 Parent 75 Teacher 75 Ages Ages 10-14 for sophisticated readers; 12+ for typical middle graders. Strong reader appeal ages 13+ due to historical WWII interest and coming-of-age arc.

8 books matched on the same reader profile

Each pick scored its match using the 30-dimension data we record on every book — interest hooks (e.g. epic worldbuilding, friendship arcs), character appeal, emotional core, tone, pacing. The "why it matches" line under each book tells you exactly why it should land.

  1. 1
    Cover of Major Impossible (Nathan Hale's Hazardous Tales #9)

    Major Impossible (Nathan Hale's Hazardous Tales #9)

    by Nathan Hale

    Kid 70 Parent 60 Teacher 66 Ages 9-12
    Why it matches "Going Solo"
    • Same genre (historical)
    • Both adventurous in tone
    • Same pacing (rollercoaster)
    • Same emotional weight (moderate)
  2. 2
    Cover of Little House on the Prairie

    Little House on the Prairie

    by Laura Ingalls Wilder

    Kid 61 Parent 69 Teacher 77 Ages 8-11
    Why it matches "Going Solo"
    • Same genre (historical)
    • Same emotional weight (moderate)
    • Same tension source (survival)
    • Shared humor: gentle wit
  3. 3
    Cover of Flashback Four #2: The Titanic Mission

    Flashback Four #2: The Titanic Mission

    by Dan Gutman

    Kid 62 Parent 56 Teacher 53 Ages 9-11
    Why it matches "Going Solo"
    • Same genre (historical)
    • Both adventurous in tone
    • Same pacing (rollercoaster)
    • Same tension source (survival)
  4. 4
    Cover of Vacation Under the Volcano

    Vacation Under the Volcano

    by Mary Pope Osborne

    Kid 65 Parent 64 Teacher 66 Ages 6-8
    Why it matches "Going Solo"
    • Same genre (historical)
    • Both adventurous in tone
    • Same emotional weight (moderate)
    • Shared humor: situational, gentle wit
  5. 5
    Cover of I Survived the Hindenburg Disaster, 1937

    I Survived the Hindenburg Disaster, 1937

    by Lauren Tarshis

    Kid 60 Parent 56 Teacher 62 Ages 8-10
    Why it matches "Going Solo"
    • Same genre (historical)
    • Same emotional weight (moderate)
    • Same tension source (survival)
    • Shared humor: gentle wit
  6. 6
    Cover of Ground Zero

    Ground Zero

    by Alan Gratz

    Kid 71 Parent 79 Teacher 88 Ages 10-12
    Why it matches "Going Solo"
    • Same genre (historical)
    • Same pacing (rollercoaster)
    • Same tension source (survival)
    • Both lean into survival wild + quest journey
  7. 7
    Cover of Refugee

    Refugee

    by Alan Gratz

    Kid 74 Parent 77 Teacher 82 Ages 10-13
    Why it matches "Going Solo"
    • Same genre (historical)
    • Same pacing (rollercoaster)
    • Same tension source (survival)
    • Both lean into quest journey + survival wild
  8. 8
    Cover of A Long Walk to Water

    A Long Walk to Water

    by Linda Sue Park

    Kid 61 Parent 75 Teacher 86 Ages Ages 10-13
    Why it matches "Going Solo"
    • historical as secondary genre
    • Same tension source (survival)
    • Both lean into survival wild + quest journey
    • Shared character appeal: brave explorer

Want a match made for YOUR kid specifically?

These matches are profile-against-profile. Take the 2-minute SPARK quiz and we'll match a book to your kid's actual reading personality — interest, habits, what holds them.

Take the SPARK quiz →

How these matches are scored

We score every children's book on KidsBookCheck across 30 dimensions — kid-side (laugh-out-loud, plot twists, mental movie, heart-punch, character voice, etc.), parent-side (writing quality, moral reasoning, vocabulary, age-fit), and teacher-side (read-aloud power, discussion fuel, empathy building). Plus rich metadata: tone, pacing, emotional weight, interest hooks, character appeal, emotional core, tension source, humor style.

For every book, our profile-match algorithm finds others where the most heavily-weighted dimensions overlap. That's why these matches feel different from "readers also enjoyed" — we're matching by what hooks the same reader, not by who else bought it. More about our scoring →