Writing a Book Review for the 11+
The book review structure for 11+ exams — plot summary, character analysis, theme, personal opinion, and the most common mistake to avoid.
In this article
What a Book Review Actually Tests
The book review is a non-fiction form that appears particularly in independent school entrance papers and ISEB assessments. It tests two things simultaneously: whether you can understand and discuss a text, and whether you can express your own reasoned response to it.
A book review is not a retelling. It is not a plot summary. It is your assessment of a book — what it does well, what it does less well, who it would suit, and what it made you think or feel. The examiner already knows what happens in any book you might review. What they want to see is your thinking about it.
The Structure
A strong book review moves through five sections:
1. Opening — title, author, and brief context
Name the book and author, give the genre, and set up your overall impression in one or two sentences.
2. Brief plot summary (without spoilers)
Two or three sentences covering the central premise. Do not reveal the ending. Think of it as what you would say to a friend to make them curious without ruining anything.
3. Character analysis
Discuss one or two key characters. What made them compelling or frustrating? Did they feel real? Did they change?
4. Discussion of themes
What bigger ideas does the book explore — friendship, identity, courage, belonging? Give at least one specific example from the text to support your observation.
5. Personal opinion and recommendation
Your honest evaluation. What worked, what didn't, and who would enjoy this book? Be specific — vague praise or vague criticism both score poorly.
The Biggest Mistake: Too Much Plot
The most common weakness in 11+ book reviews is spending the majority of the piece retelling the plot, leaving almost no space for analysis or opinion. Examiners see this in the majority of responses at every sitting.
Here's a simple rule: your plot summary should take no more than two or three sentences. Everything after that should be your thinking about the book.
Compare these two approaches:
Plot-heavy (weak)
"At the start of the book, Zara discovers a mysterious door. She goes through it and finds a different world. In this world she meets a boy called Finn who helps her. They go on a journey together. At the end, Zara has to make a choice about whether to stay or go back. She goes back."
Analysis-centred (much stronger)
"At its heart, this novel is about belonging. The central question — where do you truly fit, in the world you were born into or the one you discovered? — gives the story a quiet emotional weight that lingers after the final page. Zara is a protagonist who genuinely develops: she arrives as someone defined by uncertainty and leaves with a clearer sense of her own values, even if those values come at a cost."
The second version doesn't tell the reader what happens. It tells them what the book does, which is exactly what a review should do.
Model Book Review, Annotated
[Title, author, genre, opening impression]
The Midnight Compass by Daniel Osei is a middle-grade adventure story that belongs on the shelf of any reader who loves mysteries with a historical twist. It is the kind of book that makes you want to read one more chapter at eleven o'clock at night, when you were supposed to be asleep half an hour ago.[Brief plot summary — no spoilers]
Twelve-year-old Nadia inherits a compass that, according to her late grandfather's letter, can locate 'what you most need to find.' The novel follows her investigation into what that means, drawing her into a mystery that stretches back three generations. The premise sounds simple, but the story is considerably more layered than it first appears.[Character analysis — specific and reasoned]
Nadia is a genuinely convincing protagonist. She makes mistakes, changes her mind, and occasionally lets her emotions lead her astray — all of which makes her feel real rather than simply capable. The secondary character of her reluctant ally, Marcus, provides both sharp dialogue and a genuine moral dilemma in the third act that I found more interesting than Nadia's plotline. That is both a compliment and a slight criticism: Marcus deserved more page time.[Theme — specific evidence]
The novel's central theme is inheritance: not just the physical compass, but the weight of family history and the question of whether we are obliged to carry on what those before us began. This idea is woven carefully into the plot rather than stated directly, which shows considerable skill in the writing. The scene in Chapter 11, where Nadia reads her grandfather's old journals, is the emotional core of the book — understated and quietly devastating.[Personal opinion and recommendation]
My one reservation is that the ending, while satisfying, ties things up rather too neatly. Real mysteries rarely resolve so cleanly, and a more ambiguous conclusion might have honoured the complexity of the story. That said, this is a minor complaint about an otherwise confident and engaging novel. I would recommend The Midnight Compass to readers aged ten and over who enjoy mystery, history, and characters who think carefully before they act.
This model is approximately 340 words. Notice that the plot summary occupies just one paragraph, while three paragraphs are devoted to analysis and one to personal opinion. That balance is what earns top marks.
Review Template
Use this framework whenever you write a book review:
- Paragraph 1: Title + author + genre + opening overall impression (1-2 sentences)
- Paragraph 2: Brief plot summary without spoilers (2-3 sentences maximum)
- Paragraph 3: Character analysis — choose 1 or 2 characters, give specific examples
- Paragraph 4: Theme — what bigger idea does the book explore? Give one text example
- Paragraph 5: Personal opinion — what works, what doesn't, who would enjoy it
Practice Prompt
Write a review of a book you have read recently. Include a brief plot summary, an analysis of the main character, and a discussion of one theme. End with a recommendation for a specific type of reader.
Choose a book you know well enough to discuss in detail. Avoid books you've only read once and remember vaguely — you need specific examples to support your analysis. Set a timer for 25 minutes and work through the five-paragraph template above.
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