Families who loved All You Can Be with ADHD by Penn Holderness often look for books with a similar feel. These 20 recommendations were selected for their similarity in style, theme, and reading level.

Reach for this book when your child expresses frustration about being 'too much,' having a 'loud' brain, or feeling like they constantly fall short of classroom expectations. It provides an immediate emotional safety net for children who feel isolated by their neurodivergence, shifting the narrative from a list of deficits to a celebration of cognitive diversity. The story invites children into the ADHD Club, a community where high energy and wandering minds are viewed as the fuel for creativity and innovation. Written in an upbeat, rhyming style by authors who live with ADHD themselves, it normalizes the daily struggles of concentration while emphasizing the resilience and joy that define the ADHD experience. It is a perfect tool for parents and teachers to foster self-acceptance in children aged 4 to 8, helping them see that their brain is not broken, but rather a unique engine for imagination.