Families who loved Charles Dickens and the Street Children of London by Andrea Warren often look for books with a similar feel. These 20 recommendations were selected for their similarity in style, theme, and reading level.
Reach for this book when your child starts noticing social inequality or asking why some people struggle while others live in comfort. It is a powerful tool for the middle schooler who feels a budding sense of justice and wants to know how one person can actually change the world. Through the lens of Victorian London, Andrea Warren explores the harsh realities of child labor and poverty that Charles Dickens experienced firsthand and later immortalized in his novels. The book weaves together biography and social history, showing how Dickens used his own trauma and his gift for storytelling to advocate for those without a voice. While it tackles heavy themes like financial hardship and homelessness, the message is one of profound agency and empathy. It is ideal for ages 10 to 14, providing enough historical distance to feel safe while offering clear parallels to modern issues of fairness and compassion. You might choose this to help your child see that their writing and their voice have the power to create real change.