Families who loved The Homeschool Liberation League by Lucy Frank 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 schooler expresses a deep, visceral frustration with the confinement of traditional schooling or feels like their personal spark is being extinguished by rigid schedules. It is a story for the child who asks, Is this all there is to learning? and needs to see that their desire for autonomy is valid even if their methods for seeking it are messy. The story follows Katya, an eighth grader who is suffocating under the social and academic pressures of her junior high. When she meets a group of quirky homeschoolers, she begins to imagine a life defined by curiosity rather than bells and hallway passes. This realistic novel explores themes of self-advocacy, the complexity of parent-child negotiation, and the courage required to define oneself outside the status quo. It is an excellent choice for sparking conversations about educational fit, personal agency, and the difference between quitting and pivoting.