Jupiter

Michael D. Cole

Cover of Jupiter

Jupiter

Age Rating, Reading Level & Content Guide

The Fifth Planet

by Michael D. Cole

Countdown to Space

Reading Level 7-8 Gentle (Lvl 1) Ages 9-12 Sweet Spot Page-Turner

The text is written at a 7th grade reading level, the subject matter is intended for middle graders (ages 9–12), and the content is gentle with no concerning themes.

We may earn a commission from these links. Bookshop.org supports independent bookstores with every purchase.

About This Book

Discover the amazing world of Jupiter, the giant planet with swirling storms and mysterious moons. Explore its fascinating history and the exciting missions that have helped us learn more about this distant world in our solar system. Perfect for curious young readers eager to dive into space science!

Quick Assessment

This is a Level 7-8 book with gentle content intensity. It's a Sweet Spot read — challenging text with gentle themes, ideal for advanced or 2e readers. No notable content concerns flagged. Written for readers ages 9-12.

For Parents

Content Intensity

Level 1 — Gentle
Gentle Mild Moderate Intense Very Intense

No conflict beyond everyday childhood experiences. Safe for sensitive readers.

Data confidence: standard

Was our "Gentle" content intensity rating accurate for this book?

Reading Insights

Hook Factor

8/10

High engagement — fast-paced, fun, and hard to put down. Great for reluctant readers.

Discussion Potential

1/10

A lighter read — great for independent enjoyment.

Book DNA

Multi-dimensional content fingerprint

Vocabulary Level
6
Emotional Weight
2
Narrative Pace
7
Theme Richness
2
World Scope
1
Data Confidence
8

More in the Countdown to Space Series

Similar Books

Based on content and theme analysis

See all books like this →

Details

Book Length

48 pages
5,124 words
34m read-aloud
ISBN
0766015114
Pages
48
Publisher
Enslow Publishing
Published
February 2001
Type
Nonfiction
Word Count
5,124
Read-Aloud
~34 min
Text Density
Light Text

Genres

Jupiter (Planet)

Subjects

JNFJnf051040Science & NatureAstronomyJupiter