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Ghost Boys

by Jewell Parker Rhodes

A ghost story about a real American tragedy that will change how your child sees the world

Kid
66
Parent
80
Teacher
85
Best fit: ages 10-13 Still works: ages 9-14 Lexile HL360L

The story

When twelve-year-old Jerome is shot by a police officer who mistakes his toy gun for a real weapon, he becomes a ghost who discovers he is not alone. Joined by the spirit of a boy killed in 1955 and hundreds of other ghost boys, Jerome learns that his death is part of a devastating historical pattern. As he watches his family grieve and forms an unexpected connection with the officer's daughter, Jerome comes to understand his purpose: bearing witness so the living can work toward change.

Age verdict

Best for ages 10-13 with adult conversation support. The reading level is easy (Lexile HL360L), but the themes of child death, racial violence, and systemic injustice require emotional maturity. Pre-reading discussion recommended for sensitive readers.

Our take

A powerful social-justice novel that adults value significantly more than kids purely enjoy — profound for classroom teaching and family discussion, but the emotional weight and minimal humor limit pure entertainment appeal for young readers.

What stands out

Each audience's top 3 dimensions. Out of 30 scored per book.

👦

Kids love

  • Heart-punch Exceptional

    funeral scene, death video, historical murder of Emmett Till. Moments linger and force readers to sit with grief. Sits AT high-stakes tier.

  • First-chapter grab Strong

    Tier 3 compared to Lunch Lady — opens with child death in first 3 sentences, immediate visceral hook. Sits AT this tier because the opening is instantaneous but brief.

👩

Parents love

  • Real-world window Exceptional

    Tier 3 compared to Blended — directly addresses police violence against Black children and connects present-day tragedy to the historical murder of Emmett Till, making abstract social injustice viscerally and unforgettably personal. Sits AT pole-star tier.

  • Parent-child conversation starter Exceptional

    Tier 3 compared to Children of Blood and Bone — few children's books create more natural openings for essential family conversations about race, justice, empathy, bearing witness, and how to be an ally and agent of change. Sits AT pole-star tier.

🍎

Teachers love

  • Discussion fuel Exceptional

    Tier 3 compared to Breakout — every chapter raises genuinely discussable questions about race, justice, perspective-taking, systemic oppression, and moral responsibility that students across backgrounds are motivated to engage with deeply. Sits AT pole-star tier.

  • Empathy & self-awareness Exceptional

    Tier 3 compared to The Remarkable Journey of Coyote Sunrise — the dual-timeline structure and cross-racial friendship between Jerome and Sarah create powerful mirrors and windows for building empathy, examining personal assumptions, and confronting uncomfortable truths. Sits AT pole-star tier.

✓ Perfect for

  • Families ready for honest conversations about race and justice
  • and mature readers ages 10-13 who connect with emotionally powerful stories. Also excellent for reluctant readers drawn in by short chapters and accessible prose
  • and for classroom use alongside social studies and civil rights curriculum.

Not ideal for

Children under 9 without adult support, readers who are highly sensitive to depictions of violence against children, or families not yet ready to discuss police violence and racial injustice with their kids.

⚠ Heads up

Death Racism Violence

At a glance

Pages
214
Chapters
21
Words
28k
Lexile
HL360L
Difficulty
Easy
POV
First Person
Illustration
None
Published
2018
Publisher
Little, Brown Books for Young Readers
ISBN
9780316262286

Mood & style

Tone: Bittersweet Pacing: Measured Weight: Heavy Tension: Injustice Humor: Gentle Wit

You'll know it worked when…

Most kids finish in 1-3 sittings. The short chapters and compelling premise pull readers through despite the heavy content.

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