Collection: Dyslexia-Friendly Books for Reluctant Readers

Dyslexia-friendly books for reluctant readers, hand-picked to help children who find reading hard. Short, gripping stories from Barrington Stoke, edited to a lower reading age and printed on cream tinted paper with an accessible, dyslexia-friendly typeface - trusted by SENCOs and parents alike.

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Our top picks

Survival in Space: The Apollo 13 Mission - by David Long

A gripping retelling of the real Apollo 13 mission for struggling, reluctant or dyslexic readers aged 8+. David Long packs courage, teamwork and high-stakes problem-solving into short, dyslexia-friendly chapters - the kind of non-fiction title that turns a sceptical reader into a curious one. Read the full description on the Survival in Space product page. £7.99.

Magicat - Barrington Stoke fiction

A warm, magical adventure edited to a reading age of 8 and laid out in Barrington Stoke's dyslexia-friendly format. When Magicat is knocked off his witch's broom and stranded far from Magic Land, friends Jessie and Ali step in to help. Perfect for reluctant fiction readers who want quick wins. View the Magicat product page. £7.99.

Our reluctant readers range brings together more than 340 short, accessible titles - the bulk of them from Barrington Stoke, the publisher trusted by SEND specialists for genuinely engaging stories that respect the reader. Every book is edited to a clear reading age, set in a dyslexia-friendly font and printed on cream paper to reduce visual stress, so the reading experience itself is calmer.

Around 1 in 10 people are dyslexic, and the British Dyslexia Association reports that early access to the right books is one of the strongest predictors of long-term reading confidence. The collection covers interest ages from 5 to teen, with reading ages from 5+ to 11+, so a Year 8 pupil with a reading age of 8 can pick a book that looks and feels right for their age, not their level.

What are dyslexia-friendly books?

Dyslexia-friendly books are titles designed to be easier to read for children and adults with dyslexia or visual stress. The text is set in a high-legibility typeface, lines are spaced more generously, paragraphs are kept short, and the paper is usually cream or off-white to lower the contrast that can blur or shimmer for some dyslexic readers. The story content is edited to a defined reading age, but the interest level stays age-appropriate.

How do these books help reluctant readers?

Reluctant readers usually disengage because books feel too long, too hard, or too babyish for their age. The titles in this collection solve all three problems at once - short page counts (typically 64 to 96 pages), gripping plots from authors like Tom Palmer, David Long and Jenny McLachlan, and content pitched at the reader's actual age rather than their reading age. A child can finish a book in a sitting, which builds the sense of achievement that fuels the next read.

How should SENCOs and parents choose the right book?

The two numbers that matter most are reading age (how hard the words and sentences are) and interest age (how mature the content is). For a confident match, find a book whose reading age is at or just below the child's tested level, and whose interest age matches their year group. Use the filters on this page to narrow by both. Schools buying for whole-class libraries should mix genres - real-world non-fiction, fantasy, sport, friendship - so every reluctant reader finds something that hooks them. Parents at home can browse our literacy learning from home range for paired support.

Do these books support pupils with EHCPs and SEND provision?

Yes. Schools across the country use Barrington Stoke titles as part of SEND provision under the SEND Code of Practice, including for pupils with an EHCP whose targets cover reading fluency, comprehension or engagement. Because the books are accessible without being patronising, they sit comfortably in mainstream Key Stage 2 and Key Stage 3 classrooms as well as specialist settings. Pair them with reading rulers or coloured overlays for pupils whose reading is also affected by visual stress.

 

Need advice? Call us to have a chat - 01394 671 818 or email us hello@thedyslexiashop.co.uk

Frequently asked questions

What makes a book dyslexia-friendly?

A dyslexia-friendly book uses a high-legibility typeface, generous line spacing, short paragraphs, and cream or off-white paper to reduce the visual contrast that can blur text for some readers. Content is edited to a defined reading age while keeping the interest level age-appropriate. Barrington Stoke books, which make up most of this collection, follow all of these standards.

What is the difference between reading age and interest age?

Reading age is how hard the words and sentences are - the technical reading level needed. Interest age is the maturity of the content. For a reluctant reader, you want a book whose reading age is at or just below their tested level and whose interest age matches their school year. A Year 8 pupil with a reading age of 8 should not be reading a picture book - they need an age-appropriate story written more accessibly.

Are Barrington Stoke books good for children with dyslexia?

Barrington Stoke is the leading specialist publisher for dyslexic and reluctant readers and works with experienced editors to adapt the text without losing the story. Every title is set in a dyslexia-friendly font, printed on cream paper, and edited to a clearly stated reading age. The books are widely used by SENCOs and recommended by the British Dyslexia Association as accessible reading material for SEND pupils.

How can I encourage a reluctant reader at home?

Start with short books at the right reading age, in a genre your child already enjoys in other media - football, animals, ghost stories, friendship dramas, real-world adventures. Read together rather than testing them, and let them stop and start without pressure. Quick wins build confidence. Pairing books with a reading ruler or a coloured overlay can make the page feel calmer for children with visual stress.

Do schools use these books for SEND provision?

Yes. Schools use Barrington Stoke titles routinely as part of SEND provision under the SEND Code of Practice, including for pupils with an EHCP whose targets cover reading fluency, comprehension or engagement. Because the books read naturally and look age-appropriate, they fit mainstream Key Stage 2 and Key Stage 3 classrooms as well as specialist SEND settings. Many SENCOs build whole-class libraries from this range.

What ages are reluctant reader books for?

This collection covers interest ages from 5 through to teen, with reading ages from 5+ to 11+. The largest group of titles sits at reading age 8+ with interest ages of 9+ to 13+, which matches the most common point at which children become reluctant readers - typically Year 4 to Year 8. Filter by interest age and reading age on this page to narrow the choice.

Are there dyslexia-friendly books for adults?

Yes. While this collection focuses on children and teens, Barrington Stoke also publishes adult titles edited for accessibility, and we stock these alongside our wider adult dyslexia books range. They use the same dyslexia-friendly font, paper and layout standards, with content pitched at adult interest levels for readers who want shorter, accessible novels.