Tom Gates: what to read next

The Tom Gates books by Liz Pichon are hugely popular – but if your children or students are looking for something new, which stories could they possibly love as much? We have some ideas, and you shared your thoughts, too…

Liz Pichon’s Tom Gates books have sold over eight million copies to date and are published in 43 countries. Liz’s signature combination of comedy, zany illustration and Tom’s slightly chaotic everyday life is awesomely popular with primary school kids, but if your Tom Gates fans are looking for something else, here are a few books to try…

For more books about school

Illustration: Katie Abey 

School is a big part of the Tom Gates universe, and is, of course, extremely relatable for children. The Beaky Malone series by Barry Hutchison and Katie Abey is even sillier, and Em Lynas’ You Can’t Make Me Go To Witch School is full of anarchic magic and tons of laughs. Finally, there’s always the fabulous Pamela Butchart, whose writing about school is spot on in terms of humour and observation.

  • Beaky Malone: World’s Worst School Trip

    by Barry Hutchison, illustrated by Katie Abey 

    2017 5 to 14 years 

    • Chapter books
    • Funny

    After stepping through a truth-telling machine, Beaky Malone finds himself in all sorts of trouble. With comical illustrations, short chapters and hilarity on every page, this riotous book is ideal for independent young readers.

  • You Can’t Make Me Go To Witch School

    by Em Lynas, illustrated by Jamie Littler 

    2017 9 to 14 years 

    • Adventure
    • Funny

    Dairy Wart must escape Toadspit Towers to perform her Bottom. But will Toadspit Towers let her go? A hilarious, magical story about making new friends and finding out who you really are.

For more books about families

Illustration: Helen Crawford-White 

Tom’s family is a key element of his story, whether it’s his Gran with her unusual cookery, his best friend next door or his annoying sister. Kids looking for a book they can relate to in terms of families could try Good Dog McTavish by Meg Rosoff, in which McTavish the dog takes a disorganised family in hand.

Year 5 or 6 kids will love What Lexie Did by Emma Shevah, in which Lexie negotiates her way in a big Greek Cypriot family, while the books in the Nothing To See Here Hotel series feature a hilarious family (complete with a troll gran in the attic) that run a hotel for monsters.

  • Good Dog McTavish

    by Meg Rosoff, illustrated by Grace Easton 

    2017 5 to 14 years 

    • Chapter books
    • Funny

    When fluffy pooch McTavish moves in, he finds his new family in quite a pickle. But not to worry because he’s sure he’ll have them retrained in no time at all. A charming and heartwarming short novel, full of spark, keen observations and sly humour.

  • What Lexie Did

    by Emma Shevah, illustrated by Helen Crawford-White 

    2018 9 to 14 years 

    • Chapter books
    • Coming-of-age

    When Lexie is caught between telling the truth and lying, her decision splits her family apart – can she figure out how to bring them back together? A complex, sophisticated exploration of honesty that’s also brilliantly funny and compelling.

  • The Nothing to See Here Hotel

    by Steven Butler, illustrated by Steven Lenton 

    2018 5 to 14 years 

    • Chapter books
    • Fantasy
    • Funny

    Frankie Banister and his family run the Nothing to See Here Hotel, which is cunningly hidden from human view by magic and lots of really bad TripAdvisor reviews. The cast of characters in this laugh-out-loud book are full of sparkle, oddness and vitality.

For more funny books

Illustration: Erica Salcedo 

For sheer laugh out loud silliness, Tom Gates fans are sure to adore Dav Pilkey’s Dog Man and Captain Underpants series, especially if they like funny books they can read quickly.

More confident readers will gobble up the Kid Normal series, in which Murph, a normal boy, finds himself at a school for kids with superpowers. And Iguana Boy Saves the World With a Triple Cheese Pizza is full of laughs as well as great characters and a page-turning plot.

  • Dog Man

    by Dav Pilkey 

    2016 5 to 9 years 

    • Adventure
    • Comic books
    • Funny

    Dog Man, created by Captain Underpants’ Dav Pilkey, is a comic masterclass, perfect for the surreal sense of humour of the average six- to nine-year-old.

  • Kid Normal

    by Greg James and Chris Smith, illustrated by Erica Salcedo 

    2017 9 to 14 years 

    • Adventure
    • Funny

    This spoof superhero epic certainly delivers: dastardly villains, capes, tights and mild-mannered heroes. Yet it also explores familiar school anxieties that everyone else is smarter, stronger, better. Here, even Kid Normal has superpowers!

  • Iguana Boy Saves the World with a Triple Cheese Pizza

    by James Bishop, illustrated by Rikin Parekh 

    2018 5 to 14 years 

    • Funny

    Dylan Spencer has a rubbish superpower: he can talk to iguanas. But when all the rest of the world’s superheroes are kidnapped, he is the only one left to save the planet. A hilarious and heartwarming book, packed full of brilliant, comic-strip illustrations.

For more illustrated books

Illustration: Jason Cockcroft 

The book of books for kids that like illustrated stories with a healthy dash of surreal humour could be said to be Andy Griffiths and Terry Denton’s The 13 Storey Treehouse series, in which Andy and Terry build ever more irrationally stupendous layers to their treehouse and battle to get their book written for the publisher on time.

Sibéal Pounder’s Bad Mermaids series is funny and delightfully illustrated by Jason Cockcroft, and if you’re looking for incredible illustration in a quick read, Chris Riddell’s Goth Girl or (with Paul Stewart) Chaos Zone novels are brilliant.

  • The 13-Storey Treehouse

    by Andy Griffiths, illustrated by Terry Denton 

    2015 5 to 14 years 

    • Fantasy
    • Funny

    Griffiths and Denton create a triumph to engage even the most determined hater of books, which includes hilarious cartoon drawings.

  • Bad Mermaids

    by Sibéal Pounder, illustrated by Jason Cockroft 

    2017 5 to 14 years 

    • Adventure
    • Chapter books
    • Funny

    Beattie, Mimi and Zelda will change the way you see mermaids forever as they attempt to save their home of Swirlyshell in this delightfully silly story from the author of Witch Wars.

  • Goth Girl and the Wuthering Fright

    by Chris Riddell 

    2015 9 to 14 years 

    • Adventure
    • Funny

    While famous writers and their pampered pets gather for a literary dog show at Ghastly-Gorm Hall, Goth Girl Ada has a mystery to solve. This high-speed adventure is penned and illustrated by the children’s laureate, Chris Riddell.

  • Scavenger: Chaos Zone

    by Paul Stewart, illustrated by Chris Riddell 

    2015 9 to 14 years 

    • Adventure
    • Science fiction

    The second in the Scavenger series, Chaos Zone finds York and his robot Zoid friend Belle exploding from a ventilation tube into a strange forest. A thousand years into space, the animals and plants aboard the city-sized Biosphere spaceship have mutated. But what has happened to the humans on board the ship?

Your suggestions

Illustration: David Roberts 

Those were our suggestions, but we also wanted to hear which books and authors you would recommend.

To start you off, we asked Tamsin Rosewell, bookseller at Kenilworth Books, to recommend us some of her favourite reads for Tom Gates fans. She said:

For all those young readers first exploring new genres and getting to grips with the breadth of the English language, we don’t talk enough about short stories. Short stories are rewarding and powerful, and through them you can dip in and explore a wide range of writing.

I love Lucy Coats’ Beasts of Olympus series – these are little illustrated chapter books based on Greek mythology. Each book tells many shorter tales, and they all weave together. No childhood should be without access to mythology; it is both wonderfully entertaining and hugely important to world culture. David Roberts’ illustrations bring to life the many extraordinary gods and monsters, from centaurs and winged horses, to serpent-headed Gorgons and a pantheon of goddesses, gods and demi-gods.

For the kids who love a good creepy story, I’d also recommend Chris Priestley’s Tales of Terror, three books of intelligent and fun little ghost stories. Like Tom Gates, they have an extensive cast of children as main characters – some delightful and some perfectly horrible. Each story can be enjoyed on its own, but they also all weave together and come full circle if you do read all three books. Chris Priestley’s beautiful writing will be different and challenging for those who’ve learned to love the bright, colloquial chat of Tom Gates, but David Roberts’ illustrations allow readers to both pause and also explore the darkly comic setting.’

Great ideas from Tamsin, then – and you didn’t disappoint either, coming up with some brilliant suggestions! Here are some of our favourites:

  • Claire on Facebook revealed that her 9‑year-old is flying through’ the World of Norm books by Jonathan Meres and illustrator Donough O’Malley, and they are very popular’ at @HazeleyLibrary (where The Private Blog of Joe Cowley by Ben Davis is also going down well).
  • Over on Instagram, @tamski74 suggested the Beetle Boy books by M. G. Leonard, explaining that her daughter is obsessed’ with them: She can not put them down.’
  • We had lots of great ideas from you on Facebook: Helen’s son loves James Patterson’s Middle School books, Amalia called John Dougherty’s Stinkbomb and Ketchup Face series awesome’, Claire went for Lemony Snicket’s A Series of Unfortunate Events and Sheena said The Fantastic Four Fish Fingers by Jason Beresford and Vicky Barker is a funny series’ that her son likes.
  • The sign of success is a series that children can’t stop devouring, so you might want to check out Andy Stanton’s Mr Gum books, as Clare explained: My 9‑year-old is working through [them] and plays the audiobook versions over and over!’
  • Similarly, Emma shared some ideas from a true Liz Pichon fan: My son eats up the Tom Gates books and rereads them often. He also read the 13-Storey Treehouse series, Diary of a Wimpy Kid series and the Timmy Failure books within days of acquiring them.’
  • Back on Twitter, @BVCLib had some super ideas for us: We love Last Kids on Earth by Max Brallier, Dark Lord: The Teenage Years by Jamie Thomson, Charlie Merrick’s Misfits by Dave Cousins and Boywatching by Chloe Bennet.’
  • And finally, start marking your calendar, because @janesetheridge came up with one to watch: It’s not out until April, but I’d recommend Planet Omar by Zanib Mian, illustrated by Nadaya Mafaridik.’ We can’t wait!

Join in!

Those are some of our ideas – but what about you? What do you love reading?

Let us know by messaging us on social media @BookTrust using the hashtag #WhatToReadAfter

Bookfinder

Use the Bookfinder to find the perfect book for you, your family and friends. You can use our special tools to search hundreds of children’s book reviews by age, category and theme.

Try the Bookfinder now