Families who loved Home Is Not a Country by Safia Elhillo 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 teenager feels like an outsider in their own skin or struggles to reconcile their family heritage with their current reality. It is a powerful resource for children of immigrants who wonder about the lives their parents left behind and the versions of themselves that might have existed in another country. Through beautiful verse, it explores themes of cultural isolation, the weight of family secrets, and the search for belonging. This novel follows Nima, a girl caught between her life in America and her mother's memories of Sudan. The story takes a magical turn when Nima's alter ego, Yasmeen, manifests from a photograph, forcing Nima to confront the ghosts of her family's past. While it touches on heavy subjects like xenophobia and grief, it remains a hopeful exploration of identity that helps teenagers normalize their feelings of being caught between two worlds. It is an ideal pick for starting deep conversations about heritage and self-acceptance.