Families who loved The Downside of Being Up by Alan Lawrence Sitomer 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 middle school son begins to experience the jarring, involuntary, and often mortifying physical transitions of puberty. It is specifically designed for the child who is feeling 'betrayed' by their own body or who is retreating into a shell of embarrassment as their peers begin to change at different rates. The story follows Bobby Connor, a middle schooler whose life becomes a series of high stakes comedic disasters as he navigates voice cracks, sudden growth, and the social minefield of being a developing boy. Through humor and high energy prose, the book explores themes of self-confidence, identity, and the anxiety of trying to fit in when your body is literally standing out. It is a perfect choice for parents looking to normalize the 'gross' or awkward parts of growing up without a clinical tone, offering instead a relatable, secular, and deeply funny perspective that makes these changes feel like a shared rite of passage rather than a solo crisis.