My Bookroo Subscription Box Review

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I first heard of Bookroo last year when I did a write-up on Book Riot about the 5 Best Middle Grade Box Subscriptions. I’m so pleased to say I’ve now tried the service out and can recommend it for anyone looking to stock up your children’s TBR pile. More than ever before, connecting kids with great books is a crucial link to literacy and education, with so many schools closed or meeting alternatively given the pandemic. Let me introduce Bookroo and tell you why I recommend it—and save 15% off your first box when you follow the links in this post.

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First of all… what is Bookroo?

Amazing books kids love!

Bookroo is a monthly subscription box service that connects young readers to great books. Booroo offers boxes for the following age groups:

Board Book Club (Ages 0-3)

  • 3 board books per box

Here are the rates for the Board Book Club:

Rate for Bookroo’s Board Book Club Subscription Box

Picture Book Club (Ages 3-6)

  • 2 books per box

Here are the rates for the Picture Book Club:

Rates for Booroo’s Picture Book Club Subscription Box

Chapter Book Club (Ages 7-10)

  • 2 books per box

Here are the rates for Bookroo’s Chapter Book Box.

Rate for Bookroo’s Chapter Book Subscription Box

So, why Bookroo?

1: Expert Book Curation

A natural question that people might have is: How are the books in Bookroo’s boxes chosen? Obviously you want to have experts in children’s literature curating. And that’s exactly what you get with Bookroo, which consult with teachers, librarians, and children’s books specialists who hand-pick each title that’s chosen for the box.

2: Bookroo’s Book Platform

If you want a taste of how Bookroo chooses books, take the Book Platform for a spin. This amazing tool is available for anyone to use if you’re looking for great children’s books. If you’re seeking more kid lit, you definitely want to check out Bookroo’s Book Platform for everything from book quotes to book topics to book quizzes and more.

3: Countless Convenient Options

Bookroo is more than equipped to handle every endless customization. If you have two different age groups in your home, you can choose to alternate every other month. For example, one month you’d get board books and the next chapter books. Or, you can have two simultaneous age group boxes and save 15%. You can also give gift subscriptions. Definitely look into Bookroo’s FAQs if you need to customize your subscription.

4: Both Reliably Awesome and Surprising

You can count on Bookroo to consistently give you awesome books, but they do make an effort to surprise you. After all, discovering new books like under-the-radar gems are part of Bookroo’s selection criteria. That means that established authors and exciting debuts appear together.

5: Take the Guesswork out of Finding Books for Your Kids

There are so many books published each year—heck, each week!—that it can be totally overwhelming to find the best books for your kids. This is especially true right now given that many libraries and schools are closed, places where you’d traditionally be able to consult with a teacher or librarian expert. With Bookroo, there’s no guesswork. Each book passes the strict test to be part of the box.

6: Save Money with a Bookroo Subscription

The books you receive in your Bookroo subscription have all been discounted, so you save up to 45% off the cover price. Hard to beat that!

Just follow the link here to sign up.

And now onto my personal Bookroo review

I received a Bookroo subscription box for review this September. I chose the chapter book option because I need to read middle grade novels for my MFA in Writing for Children and Young Adult program.

I was delighted when my Bookroo box shipped, which I could track the delivery status of online.

At last it arrived!

My Bookroo Chapter Book Club arrived in a colorful box!

Unboxing was fun! Everything was put together so perfectly.

Opening up my Bookroo box!

Both books were wrapped lovingly.

My books in the Bookroo box were each wrapped with care

And then it was time for the books!

I received two books in my Bookroo chapter book box, along with a note introducing the books.

First, I unwrapped Lily and Fin by Cornelia Funke:

Lily and Fin by Cornelia Funke

I have already started Lily and Fin and am enjoying it immensely, not least because of the author’s quirky illustrations. It’s nice that this is an international pick, too, as Funke’s book was originally published in German. It’s terrific that Bookroo is widening the lens of kid lit.

Lily and Fin was an especially good selection because the book bridges the gap between chapter books and “lower middle grade.” It’s tricky to write for and select books for this age group, which is why it’s so encouraging that Bookroo chose it rather than sending two “classic” middle grade ages 8-12. Bookroo obviously knows that readers in this age group are often in a time of transition. Booroo is right there to meet the challenge.

The second book in the box was Lindsey Becker’s The Star Thief.

The Star Thief by Lindsey Becker

Although released in 2018, The Star Thief feels like a fresh, new, and under-the-radar book, the kind a librarian would knowingly recommend as a personal favorite. I also love that Bookroo paired a debut with an established author.

Again, I appreciated that Bookroo’s Chapter Book Box mixed up reading levels for that tricky time when your young reader might be bridging into a new, more complex type of story.

Is Bookroo Worth It? My Bookroo review

The bottom line on my Bookroo review: this subscription box service for young readers is an affordable way to bring expertly curated books into your home, now needed more than ever. I heartily endorse it!

For More Information

For more info on Bookroo, check out Bookroo’s FAQs.

So what are you waiting for? Sign up for Bookroo today and bring more great books into your children’s lives.

Sarah S. Davis is the founder of Broke by Books, a blog about her journey as a schizoaffective disorder bipolar type writer and reader. Sarah's writing about books has appeared on Book Riot, Electric Literature, Kirkus Reviews, BookRags, PsychCentral, and more. She has a BA in English from the University of Pennsylvania, a Master of Library and Information Science from Clarion University, and an MFA in Writing for Children and Young Adults from Vermont College of Fine Arts.

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