Families who loved Leon's Story by Leon Walter Tillage 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 starts asking hard questions about why people are treated differently because of their skin color or when they are learning about the civil rights movement in school. This memoir provides a deeply personal, primary source perspective on the Jim Crow era, moving beyond textbook facts to the lived reality of a Black family in North Carolina. It is an essential tool for parents who want to foster empathy and a historical understanding of systemic injustice. While the book touches on heavy themes including poverty and racial violence, it is grounded in the strength of family and the quiet dignity of Leon's narrative voice. It serves as a bridge between the painful past and the hope of the civil rights movement, helping children ages 8 to 12 process complex history through the eyes of someone who lived it. It is an honest, unsentimental account that honors the resilience of the human spirit.