Families who loved What the World Eats by Faith D'Aluisio 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 noticing differences in how people live, eat, or spend money, or when you want to cultivate a sense of global citizenship. This photojournalistic masterpiece offers a seat at the table with twenty-five families from twenty-one different countries, showing exactly what they eat in a single week and how much it costs. It is a powerful tool for building empathy and gratitude, as it moves beyond stereotypes to show the beautiful, messy, and diverse reality of modern family life. While it introduces complex topics like economic disparity and food insecurity, it does so through the universal language of the family meal, making it an accessible and eye-opening read for children aged nine and up. It provides a perfect bridge for conversations about culture, health, and our shared humanity.