Families who loved A Time for Dancing by Davida Wills Hurwin often look for books with a similar feel. These 20 recommendations were selected for their similarity in style, theme, and reading level.
A parent should reach for this book when their teenager is struggling to process a friend's life-threatening illness or navigating the complex grief of a terminal diagnosis. It serves as a raw, unflinching guide for those who feel helpless watching a peer suffer, offering a mirror for the anger, fear, and exhaustion that accompany such a heavy reality. The story follows Sam and Jules, lifelong best friends and dancers whose world is shattered when Jules is diagnosed with cancer during their senior year of high school. Told in alternating perspectives, the novel explores the physical toll of treatment and the psychological distance that can grow between the sick and the healthy. It is a secular, realistic, and deeply emotional journey that emphasizes the importance of showing up for those we love, even when it feels impossible. While the subject matter is intense, the book provides a vital space for teens to normalize their complicated feelings about illness and mortality.