Families who loved Midnight Forests: A Story of Gifford Pinchot and Our National Forests by Gary Hines 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 who owns the trees in the park or why we aren't allowed to build houses in the middle of a forest. It is a perfect choice for the young explorer who feels a deep, instinctive connection to the outdoors and needs to see how passion can be transformed into a lifelong career of service and protection. Through the story of Gifford Pinchot, children learn that being a leader often means standing up for things that cannot speak for themselves, like the ancient trees and wild rivers. The book follows Pinchot from his nature-filled childhood in Pennsylvania to his formal education in France, eventually detailing his pivotal role in creating the U.S. Forest Service. While it is a biography, the emotional core focuses on the themes of stewardship and the satisfaction of finding one's purpose. It is ideally suited for children aged 6 to 10, offering a sophisticated but accessible look at how one person's vision shaped the American landscape we enjoy today. Parents will appreciate how it introduces complex concepts like conservation versus consumption in a gentle, narrative way.