I’m sure you didn’t mean this, but it sounds like you would prefer your 1st grade son to read Dickens rather than Captain Underpants?
It’s important to respect a child’s reading level and maturity level. I was an advanced reader, and when I was in 5th grade, the wonderful movie/musical “Oliver” was in the theaters. I checked out Oliver Twist from our school library, but couldn’t make any sense out of it. Think about it–I had little knowledge of England other than the Beatles, Twiggy, and Barnabas Collins! I didn’t know much about economics, history, etc. even of my own country, let alone England!
So I gave up on Oliver Twist. I did read A Christmas Carol and have read it annually ever since (I’m now 61), and I can quote many passages from memory. The more I learned about English history, the more Dickens’ works made sense to me.
But I was in 5th grade (according to the Iowa Basic Skills tests back then, I was reading at a 12th grade level)! Your son is in 1st grade.
Captain Underpants is age-appropriate and will help him build the skills and understanding he needs to be able to read, comprehend, and enjoy more advanced books down the road.
When my daughters were babies, I went to our local library and the excellent librarian gave me a list of all the books that children should read at each different age. Yes, there were books listed for 6 months and under, 1 year, 2 years, etc. all the way through high school.
I took that list and started working on it. My older daughter and I made twice-weekly trips to the library, once for story-time (done well by another great librarian), and once to return the two dozen books that we had read during the week and check out two dozen more!
By the time she was in kindergarten, she was reading well enough to read a narration for a class play, and she could read the words in the hymnals in our church.
Today that busy daughter lives in the Big City and works very hard in multiple jobs in her field. But she still finds time to read a book a week.
Same for second daughter.
I highly recommend that parents ask at their local library and start on that list!
