The Glass Castle
Why it's similar
The Glass Castle is the memoir most readers reach for after Educated, and for good reason. Jeannette Walls grew up with parents who were brilliant, charismatic, and spectacularly irresponsible. Her father was an alcoholic genius who taught her physics but could not hold a job. Her mother was an artist who let her children go hungry while she painted. Like Westover, Walls writes about poverty and neglect without self-pity, and the result is devastating. Both memoirs share a central paradox: the same parents who damaged these women also gave them something valuable.
Westover's father taught her to work without limits. Walls's father gave her a fearless curiosity about the world. The writing styles align too. Both authors use specific, concrete scenes instead of abstract reflection. You feel the cold, smell the junkyard, hear the arguments. If you read Educated wanting more memoirs about surviving chaotic childhoods with complicated love, The Glass Castle is where you go.