Read after

What to read after
"Let's Get Invisible!"

Your kid finished Let's Get Invisible!. Here are 8 books matched across 30 dimensions — not by what other people bought.

Cover of Let's Get Invisible!

The book they finished

Let's Get Invisible!

by R.L. Stine

A magic mirror turns a birthday surprise into a creepy identity puzzle with an ending that lingers

Kid 61 Parent 51 Teacher 61 Ages 9-11

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 Eerie Elementary #1: The School is Alive!

    Eerie Elementary #1: The School is Alive!

    by Jack Chabert

    Kid 61 Parent 48 Teacher 54 Ages 7-8
    Why it matches "Let's Get Invisible!"
    • Same genre (horror)
    • Both suspenseful in tone
    • Same tension source (supernatural threat)
    • Shared humor: situational
  2. 2
    Cover of Dark Waters

    Dark Waters

    by Katherine Arden

    Kid 60 Parent 58 Teacher 61 Ages 10-12
    Why it matches "Let's Get Invisible!"
    • Same genre (horror)
    • Both suspenseful in tone
    • Same pacing (slow burn to explosive)
    • Same emotional weight (moderate)
  3. 3
    Cover of City of Ghosts

    City of Ghosts

    by Victoria Schwab

    Kid 64 Parent 57 Teacher 62 Ages 9-12
    Why it matches "Let's Get Invisible!"
    • horror as secondary genre
    • Both suspenseful in tone
    • Same emotional weight (moderate)
    • Same tension source (supernatural threat)
  4. 4
    Cover of Wait Till Helen Comes: A Ghost Story

    Wait Till Helen Comes: A Ghost Story

    by Mary Downing Hahn

    Kid 64 Parent 67 Teacher 66 Ages Ages 9–12
    Why it matches "Let's Get Invisible!"
    • Same genre (horror)
    • Same pacing (slow burn to explosive)
    • Same tension source (supernatural threat)
    • Both lean into creepy spooky + sibling family
  5. 5
    Cover of Rowley Jefferson’s Awesome Friendly Spooky Stories

    Rowley Jefferson’s Awesome Friendly Spooky Stories

    by Jeff Kinney

    Kid 63 Parent 59 Teacher 62 Ages 8-11
    Why it matches "Let's Get Invisible!"
    • Same genre (horror)
    • Same emotional weight (moderate)
    • Same tension source (supernatural threat)
    • Shared humor: situational
  6. 6
    Cover of Among the Hidden

    Among the Hidden

    by Margaret Peterson Haddix

    Kid 58 Parent 62 Teacher 71 Ages 9-12
    Why it matches "Let's Get Invisible!"
    • Both suspenseful in tone
    • Same pacing (slow burn to explosive)
    • Both lean into sibling family + underworld hidden world
    • Shared character appeal: everykid, reluctant hero
  7. 7
    Cover of The Mary Shelley Club

    The Mary Shelley Club

    by Goldy Moldavsky

    Kid 76 Parent 70 Teacher 66 Ages 14-17
    Why it matches "Let's Get Invisible!"
    • Same genre (horror)
    • Both suspenseful in tone
    • Both lean into creepy spooky + underworld hidden world
    • Shared character appeal: reluctant hero
  8. 8
    Cover of The Haunting of Derek Stone (The Red House and The Ghost Road)

    The Haunting of Derek Stone (The Red House and The Ghost Road)

    by Tony Abbott

    Kid 73 Parent 54 Teacher 56 Ages 11-13
    Why it matches "Let's Get Invisible!"
    • Same genre (horror)
    • Same tension source (supernatural threat)
    • Both lean into creepy spooky + sibling family
    • Shared character appeal: reluctant hero

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 →