About us
Honest ratings. No paid placement. Ever.
KidsBookCheck exists for one reason: parents need better information about children's books than marketing copy and 5-star averages give them.
Why three scores, not one
A book great for an 8-year-old might bore a parent. A book a teacher loves might not hold a kid's attention for 10 pages. Averaging those perspectives produces a number that means nothing to anyone.
So we don't average. Every book on KidsBookCheck gets a Kid score, a Parent score, and a Teacher score — independently. You see all three, and you decide which matters for the kid in front of you.
The 30 dimensions
Each score is built from up to 10 sub-dimensions — 30 in total across all three audiences. A sample:
- Kid: First-chapter Grab, Laugh-out-loud, Character Voice, Heart-punch, Plot Twists, Mental Movie, Ending Satisfaction, New Worlds
- Parent: Vocab Builder, Moral Reasoning, Writing Quality, Reading Gateway
- Teacher: Discussion Fuel, Read-aloud Power, Empathy Building
Every dimension is measured against a 100-book benchmark, so a 70 on Laugh-out-loud means the same thing for Dog Man as it does for The Bad Guys — scores are comparable across the catalog, not curve-graded.
How we actually do it
We deep-read each book. We extract craft-level details (pacing, narrative voice, emotional arc) and reader-experience signals (what ages it holds, what will thrill a reluctant reader vs. an advanced one, what's "heads-up" content). Everything gets structured into a consistent format — which is why the scorecards look the same for every book and stay comparable.
What we don't do
- No paid placement. No publisher has ever paid for a score, a review, or a position on a list.
- No affiliate-driven bias. We do use Amazon and Bookshop affiliate links — they cost you nothing and help us keep the site running. They have zero influence on scoring.
- No 5-star averages. You won't find a single "4.7/5" anywhere on this site.
Who this is for
Parents picking a birthday book. Teachers building a classroom library. Librarians matching a kid to a series. Gift-givers who want to be the hero that finally gave a kid the book that turned them into a reader.
Start with the SPARK quiz if you want a personalized match, or browse the catalog if you know what you're looking for.