Families who loved The Girl From Everywhere by Heidi Heilig 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 if your teenager is struggling with the weight of a parent's expectations or navigating a home life overshadowed by a parent's grief and addiction. It is a profound choice for young adults who feel they are living in the margins of someone else's story and are ready to claim their own agency. The story follows Nix, a girl living on a time-traveling ship with her father, Slate, who is obsessed with returning to the past to save Nix's mother, even if it means Nix might never be born. Through a blend of historical adventure and magical realism, the novel explores themes of codependency, the ethics of letting go, and the search for belonging across different cultures and eras. It is most appropriate for ages 12 and up due to complex emotional dynamics and mature themes regarding loss. Parents will appreciate how it uses the fantasy of time travel to mirror the very real feelings of a child trying to 'fix' their parent's happiness.