Families who loved Arthur's Classroom Fib by Marc Brown 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 you notice your child inflating the truth to impress friends or feeling visibly anxious after a 'harmless' lie spirals out of control. It addresses the common childhood urge to compete socially through tall tales, especially when peers share exciting (or exaggerated) weekend adventures. In this story, Arthur feels his own life is boring compared to his classmates' stories, so he invents a trip to a fancy museum. The narrative expertly captures the physical and emotional weight of dishonesty: the 'heavy' feeling in the stomach and the constant fear of being caught. It provides a gentle, low-stakes way to discuss why we lie and how coming clean brings immediate relief. It is perfectly tuned for early elementary students navigating social hierarchies and the pressure to be 'cool.'