Felix & Fiona Books in Order
2 books by Rosemary Wells. Reading level: Grades 2.9–3.1. Lower Grades (Ages 5–8).
Series books grow with readers — but that's also the trap. Most series start at one reading level and one content intensity and drift upward over the course of the run. Felix & Fiona (2 books by Rosemary Wells) lands at reading level Grades 2.9–3.1, with average content intensity 1/5. Intensity stays consistent across the series — a kid who can handle the first book can generally handle the rest.
The reading-order table below lists every book with per-volume reading level and intensity badges so you can spot any escalation before it catches your reader off guard. For a deeper dive into how we score text difficulty vs. emotional weight separately — and why series readers especially benefit from that split — see our methodology page.
Content Intensity Across the Series
ConsistentContent stays at a steady intensity level throughout the series.
Felix & Fiona Reading Order
| # | Title | Reading Level | Content |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Fiona's Little Accident (Felix and Fiona) Rosemary Wells | Level 3-4 | Gentle |
| 2 | Fiona's little lie Rosemary Wells | Level 2-3 | Gentle |
All Felix & Fiona Books
Questions about the Felix & Fiona series
- What reading level is the Felix & Fiona series?
- The Felix & Fiona series by Rosemary Wells is at a Grades 2.9–3.1 reading level (average Grade 3). Intended for Lower Grades (Ages 5–8). There are 2 books in the series.
- What order should I read the Felix & Fiona books?
- The reading-order table above lists all 2 books with per-volume reading level and intensity ratings. Start with book 1 and read in publication order unless the table indicates a different recommended order for newer readers.
- What age is the Felix & Fiona series appropriate for?
- The Felix & Fiona series is recommended for Lower Grades (Ages 5–8). The average content intensity is 1/5. Check the intensity trajectory above to see whether content gets heavier across the series — if it does, sensitive readers may want to stop earlier in the run.