Read after

What to read after
"The Princess in Black and the Giant Problem"

Your kid finished The Princess in Black and the Giant Problem. Here are 8 books matched across 30 dimensions — not by what other people bought.

Cover of The Princess in Black and the Giant Problem

The book they finished

The Princess in Black and the Giant Problem

by Shannon Hale and Dean Hale

Princess superheroes team up to outsmart a giant with creativity, not combat

Kid 59 Parent 50 Teacher 49 Ages 5-7

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 The Princess in Black Takes a Vacation

    The Princess in Black Takes a Vacation

    by Shannon Hale & Dean Hale

    Kid 58 Parent 54 Teacher 54 Ages 5-8
    Why it matches "The Princess in Black and…"
    • Same genre (fantasy)
    • Same emotional weight (light)
    • Same tension source (physical danger)
    • Shared humor: parody
  2. 2
    Cover of The Princess in Black and the Hungry Bunny Horde

    The Princess in Black and the Hungry Bunny Horde

    by Shannon Hale

    Kid 56 Parent 54 Teacher 53 Ages 5-7
    Why it matches "The Princess in Black and…"
    • Same genre (fantasy)
    • Both playful in tone
    • Same pacing (steady clip)
    • Same emotional weight (light)
  3. 3
    Cover of Waking the Rainbow Dragon

    Waking the Rainbow Dragon

    by Tracey West

    Kid 56 Parent 52 Teacher 54 Ages 6-8
    Why it matches "The Princess in Black and…"
    • Same genre (fantasy)
    • Same pacing (steady clip)
    • Same emotional weight (light)
    • Same tension source (physical danger)
  4. 4
    Cover of Amber the Orange Fairy

    Amber the Orange Fairy

    by Daisy Meadows

    Kid 33 Parent 26 Teacher 29 Ages 6-8
    Why it matches "The Princess in Black and…"
    • Same genre (fantasy)
    • Same pacing (steady clip)
    • Same emotional weight (light)
    • Both lean into magic powers + friendship crew
  5. 5
    Cover of Supertato

    Supertato

    by Sue Hendra and Paul Linnet

    Kid 62 Parent 53 Teacher 55 Ages 3-5
    Why it matches "The Princess in Black and…"
    • fantasy as secondary genre
    • Same emotional weight (light)
    • Shared humor: parody
    • Both lean into friendship crew + monsters creatures
  6. 6
    Cover of The Cloud Searchers

    The Cloud Searchers

    by Kazu Kibuishi

    Kid 69 Parent 60 Teacher 58 Ages Ages 9-11
    Why it matches "The Princess in Black and…"
    • Same genre (fantasy)
    • Same tension source (physical danger)
    • Both lean into magic powers + friendship crew
    • Shared character appeal: protector, brave explorer
  7. 7
    Cover of The Last Kids on Earth: June's Wild Flight

    The Last Kids on Earth: June's Wild Flight

    by Max Brallier

    Kid 69 Parent 56 Teacher 54 Ages 8-11
    Why it matches "The Princess in Black and…"
    • fantasy as secondary genre
    • Same pacing (steady clip)
    • Same emotional weight (light)
    • Same tension source (physical danger)
  8. 8
    Cover of Of Mice and Magic

    Of Mice and Magic

    by Ursula Vernon

    Kid 67 Parent 56 Teacher 56 Ages 8-11
    Why it matches "The Princess in Black and…"
    • Same genre (fantasy)
    • Same pacing (steady clip)
    • Same emotional weight (light)
    • Both lean into magic powers + monsters creatures

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 →