Families who loved Lupita Mañana by Patricia Beatty 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 middle-schooler is beginning to ask complex questions about social justice, migration, or why some families must work harder than others just to survive. It is particularly powerful for children who are developing an awareness of global inequality and need a story that mirrors the real-world courage found in the immigrant experience. The story follows thirteen-year-old Lupita and her brother Salvador as they are forced to leave their home in Mexico to find work in the United States after the death of their father. It explores heavy themes of grief, economic hardship, and the loss of childhood innocence through the lens of fierce sibling loyalty. Parents might choose this to foster deep empathy and to bridge the gap between abstract news headlines and the human hearts behind them. It is a realistic, often sobering look at the 'working poor' that ultimately highlights the indomitable spirit of hope.