Families who loved Freshman Year & Other Unnatural Disasters by Meredith Zeitlin often look for books with a similar feel. These 20 recommendations were selected for their similarity in style, theme, and reading level.

A parent would reach for this book when their teenager is feeling the immense pressure of starting a new school or trying to curate a perfect, cooler version of themselves. It speaks to the universal anxiety of the freshman transition, where the desire to fit in often clashes with the reality of being a messy, imperfect human. Kelsey Finkelstein is a smart and ambitious fourteen-year-old from Brooklyn who starts high school in Manhattan with a plan to rebrand herself, only to face a series of hilariously cringey setbacks. Through Kelsey's voice, the book explores themes of identity, social belonging, and the resilience needed to survive social embarrassment. It is highly appropriate for the middle school to high school transition age, offering a secular and humorous perspective on the awkwardness of growing up. Parents might choose this to normalize their child's own 'disasters' and to encourage a sense of self-acceptance when things do not go according to plan.