Lockwood & Co: what to read next

  • Horror
  • Thriller

We love the Lockwood & Co series for its unsettling suspense, the brilliant plotting and the humour between the characters. We’ve been enjoying the TV series as well – it’s so atmospheric and full of amazing action! So, once you’ve read all five books by Jonathan Stroud, where do you turn for more ghosts, banter and amazing fighting skills? Try some of these suggestions.

If you like ghosts and scary scenes

London is plagued by ghostly Visitors’ in Lockwood & Co. Set in another eerie city stalked by spectres, The Subtle Knife by Philip Pullman will give you the chills. (It’s the second in a series, though, so read Northern Lights first ideally.) Similarly, in City of Ghosts by Victoria Schwab the city of Edinburgh is teeming with spirits. The main character can interact with the ghosts, and the result is a thrilling read, with a lot of action and humour.

For a more straightforward scare, The Haunting of Aveline Jones by Phil Hickes are both terrifyingly brilliant. Not for the faint-hearted!

  • The Subtle Knife

    by Philip Pullman 

    2015 9 to 14 years 

    • Adventure
    • Classics
    • Coming-of-age
    • Fantasy
    • Love and romance
    • Thriller

    On the run, 12-year-old Will stumbles upon a mysterious parallel world where he meets the savage young girl, Lyra. Their two seemingly separate missions lead them on a dangerous and compelling fantasy adventure.

  • City of Ghosts (Victoria Schwab)

    by Victoria Schwab 

    2018 9 to 14 years 

    • Adventure
    • Ghost story
    • Horror
  • The Haunting of Aveline Jones

    by Phil Hickes, illustrated by Keith Robinson 

    2020 9 to 14 years 

    • Chapter books
    • Ghost story
    • Horror

    When Aveline finds a book about local ghosts in a second-hand bookshop, she is intrigued to learn that it once belonged to 11-year-old Primrose Penberthy, who mysteriously disappeared thirty years earlier. As Aveline is drawn deeper into the tales, events take an unsettling turn. This chilling chapter book is the first in a compelling series of ghostly mysteries for confident junior readers.

If you enjoy teamwork and humour

The dynamic between Lucy, George and Anthony Lockwood in Lockwood & Co is a welcome relief to the scary scenes. If you enjoy their banter, try Skulduggery Pleasant by Derek Landy, where a teenager teams up with a wise-cracking skeleton detective. For more ghost-fighting teamwork, Ghosts of Shanghai by Julian Sedgwick has expat Ruby and her Chinese friends form the Shanghai Ghost Society in 1926. And for a crime caper with a twist, try the Knightley and Son series by Rohan Gavin, where Darkus Knightley and his dad, whose memory is somewhat wonky, try to solve weird mysteries. Finally, for a team who really didn’t choose each other, be deliciously scared by Dread Wood by Jennifer Killick, where a group of teens are forced to work together to defeat a hidden attacker.

  • Skulduggery Pleasant

    by Derek Landy 

    2007 9 to 14 years 

    • Adventure
    • Coming-of-age
    • Fantasy
    • Funny
    • Ghost story
    • Horror
    • Myths and legends
    • Thriller

    Meet Skulduggery Pleasant, skeleton detective, fighting to save the world from wizard-gone-to-the-dark-side, Nefarian Serpine.

  • Knightley and Son

    by Rohan Gavin 

    2014 9 to 14 years 

    • Adventure

    This is a strong debut from screenwriter Rohan Gavin, which mixes up the conventions of detective fiction to great effect

  • Dread Wood

    by Jennifer Killick 

    2022 9 to 14 years 

    • Horror
    • Science fiction
    • Thriller

    As the fear and dread build up in this tense thriller, a group of misfits is forced to work as a team to defeat the most terrifying of hidden attackers. Not for the faint-hearted, this edge-of-seat horror is hard to put down, with many chapters ending on a cliff-hanger.

If you love thrilling action against other-worldly elements

Lucy is excellent with a rapier, and her sword skills often save her life and that of her team. If defending yourself against other-worldly creatures is your bag, try World of Warriors: A New Hero by Curtis Jobling where Trick Hope must fight a Skull Army. Meanwhile in Ash Mistry and the Savage Fortress by Sarwat Chadda, a wealthy Lord has surrounded himself with shape-shifting demons in India. Ash and his sister must avenge the death of their aunty and uncle.

Peter and Sofia in My Swordhand is Singing by Marcus Sedgwick need to work out why villagers are disappearing – and discover his father’s secrets. This chilling page-turner is inspired by vampire folklore and is set in a bitterly cold Eastern Europe.

Finally, the Young Samurai series by Chris Bradford is packed with action, and is set in seventeenth-century Japan, where there are no supernatural elements, but many ninjas poised to test Jack’s fighting skills. Spine-tinglingly exciting.

Those are some of our ideas – but what about you? What are your most-loved scary stories?

  • Ash Mistry and the Savage Fortress

    by Sarwat Chadda (also writes under Joshua Khan) 

    2012 9 to 14 years 

    • Myths and legends

    Covering themes of reincarnation, destiny, family, friendship, loyalty and a host of characters from Hindu belief and mythology, this is a page-turner that most children will find totally gripping.

  • My Swordhand is Singing

    by Marcus Sedgwick 

    2007 9 to 14 years 

    • Adventure
    • Around the world
    • Chapter books
    • Coming-of-age
    • Fantasy
    • Horror
    • Thriller

    Set in the seventeenth century amid the bleakness of winter in Eastern Europe, and inspired by vampire folklore, this is a superbly crafted, dark and menacing tale.

  • Young Samurai The Way of the Warrior

    by Chris Bradford 

    2009 9 to 14 years 

    • Adventure
    • Around the world
    • Historical

    This engaging historical adventure story will immerse young readers in the traditions and culture of Ancient Japan, including its complex codes of loyalty and honour.

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