You just finished The Man Who Died Twice and now everything else on your Kindle feels... flat. That charming energy? The way Richard Osman made you feel things you didn't sign up for? Yeah, we get it. That's a book hangover, and the only cure is another book that hits the same way. We didn't just search "books like The Man Who Died Twice" and call it a day. We broke down exactly what made this book land — the mood, the tropes, the pacing, the heat — and found books that match on the elements that actually matter.
We broke down The Man Who Died Twice into the elements that made it hit — and found books that match each one.
Fangirl hits the same funny and cozy notes that made The Man Who Died Twice impossible to put down. Rainbow Rowell brings cozy and nostalgic to every page.
Everyone on This Train Is a Suspect hits the same funny and clever notes that made The Man Who Died Twice impossible to put down. Benjamin Stevenson brings clever and meta to every page.
Looking for more funny and funny books after The Man Who Died Twice? The Guncle by Steven Rowley is the book your TBR has been begging you for. Heat level: comfortable.
The Maid hits the same charming and cozy notes that made The Man Who Died Twice impossible to put down. Nita Prose brings cozy and charming to every page.
The charming and cozy that made The Man Who Died Twice unforgettable? The Mystery Guest channels that exact energy. 336 pages of charming, quirky that'll fill the void.
If The Man Who Died Twice's charming and cozy energy had you one-clicking at midnight, Emily Wilde's Encyclopaedia of Faeries delivers the same rush. Heather Fawcett knows exactly what you're craving.
The Maid hits the same charming and cozy notes that made The Man Who Died Twice impossible to put down. Nita Prose brings cozy and charming to every page.
Answer one question and we'll point you to the right book.
Based on mood, trope, and pacing analysis, the most similar books to The Man Who Died Twice include The Maid, The Mystery Guest, Fangirl. Each matches on specific elements like charming and funny that made The Man Who Died Twice resonate with readers.
We recommend starting with The Maid by Nita Prose — it shares The Man Who Died Twice's core Charming energy while bringing something fresh to the table.
The Man Who Died Twice is a standalone novel. You can jump right in without reading anything else first.
The Man Who Died Twice has a spice level of 1/5. The recommendations on this page range across spice levels — each one is labeled so you can find your comfort zone.
The Man Who Died Twice is already a low-spice read (1/5). Most similar books on this page have comparable heat levels.
Every "Books Like" page on Sort By Cravings is built from element-level matching — not surface genre tags. We compare mood profiles, trope density, pacing, heat levels, and emotional tone across our entire library of 12 profiled books to find reads that match on the things that actually matter to readers. Read our editorial standards.