Educated by Tara Westover book cover Featured Selection

7 Books Like Educated

Tara Westover did not set foot in a classroom until she was seventeen. Educated tells the story of how she went from a survivalist family in rural Idaho, where her father stockpiled fuel for the end of days, to earning a PhD from Cambridge. It is a memoir about the cost of knowledge, the pain of outgrowing your family, and the question of whether self-invention requires self-destruction. The book sold millions of copies because it reads like fiction. But every word of it happened.

Tara Westover did not set foot in a classroom until she was seventeen. Educated tells the story of how she went from a survivalist family in rural Idaho, where her father stockpiled fuel for the end of days, to earning a PhD from Cambridge. It is a memoir about the cost of knowledge, the pain of outgrowing your family, and the question of whether self-invention requires self-destruction. The book sold millions of copies because it reads like fiction. But every word of it happened.

Readers searching for books like Educated are usually chasing two things: the shock of a childhood that seems impossible in modern America, and the emotional complexity of loving people who hurt you. Westover never turns her family into simple villains. Her father's paranoia comes from genuine belief. Her brother's violence exists alongside real affection. That refusal to simplify is what makes the book hit so hard. Books similar to Educated need to match that honesty.

The memoirs on this list share Educated's core tensions: faith versus freedom, family loyalty versus personal safety, and the transformative power of learning. Some describe escaping religious communities. Others come at the theme of reinvention from different cultural backgrounds. I have included a few lesser-known titles alongside the obvious picks, because some of the best memoirs in this space have not found the audience they deserve.

Books Similar To Educated

The Glass Castle by Jeannette Walls book cover

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.

The Liars' Club by Mary Karr book cover

The Liars' Club

Why it's similar

Mary Karr essentially invented the modern memoir with The Liars' Club in 1995. Set in an east Texas refinery town, it tells the story of Karr's childhood with a hard-drinking father, a mother who kept dangerous secrets, and a family where storytelling was both survival skill and weapon. The prose is razor-sharp and often funny in ways that Educated rarely is, but both books share an unflinching eye for domestic chaos. What links these memoirs is the authors' refusal to look away from ugly truths about people they love.

Westover writes about her brother's violence with the same painful precision that Karr uses to describe her mother's breakdowns. Both are acts of witness disguised as autobiography. Karr's voice is rawer and more profane than Westover's measured academic tone, which gives The Liars' Club a different energy. Readers who want a memoir with the same emotional weight but a more immediate, gut-level style will find Karr delivers it.

Born a Crime by Trevor Noah book cover

Born a Crime

Why it's similar

Trevor Noah's Born a Crime works the same territory as Educated but from a completely different angle. Noah grew up in South Africa during and after apartheid, the mixed-race child of a Black Xhosa mother and a white Swiss father. His birth was literally a crime under apartheid law. Like Westover, Noah writes about growing up in a world with rules that made no sense, navigating danger through intelligence and adaptability. The tonal difference between these memoirs is striking and productive.

Westover writes with quiet intensity. Noah is often hilarious, even when describing frightening situations. But both authors share a deep love for the mothers who raised them under impossible conditions. Both books are also about education as liberation, though Noah's classroom was the streets of Johannesburg rather than a university lecture hall. If Educated left you wanting a memoir with similar themes of identity and reinvention but a lighter touch, Born a Crime is a perfect counterweight.

The Sound of Gravel by Ruth Wariner book cover

The Sound of Gravel

Why it's similar

Ruth Wariner's The Sound of Gravel is the memoir I recommend to readers who want something as close to Educated as possible. Wariner grew up in a polygamist colony in Mexico, one of 42 children fathered by a man who was murdered when she was young. Her mother then married an abusive man, and the cycle of violence and religious control continued. Like Westover, Wariner was raised to distrust the outside world and accept suffering as God's will. The parallels to Educated are uncanny. Both women were raised in fundamentalist communities that denied them basic education and medical care.

Both describe the agonizing process of leaving behind siblings who stayed. Wariner writes with a child's perspective that makes the horror land differently than Westover's retrospective analysis. The details are specific enough to make you hold your breath. This is a hidden gem that readers of Educated need to know about. It is quieter than Westover's book but cuts just as deep.

Unfollow

Unfollow

Why it's similar

Megan Phelps-Roper grew up inside the Westboro Baptist Church, the group known for picketing funerals with hateful signs. Unfollow describes her childhood as a true believer, her rise to become one of the church's most effective social media voices, and her slow realization that the theology she was raised on was wrong. Like Educated, it is a story about what happens when you start questioning the beliefs your family considers sacred. The book shares Educated's fascination with the mechanics of leaving a closed world. Both Westover and Phelps-Roper describe the terrifying moment when critical thinking cracks the foundation of everything you were taught.

Both write about the family members who saw their departure as betrayal. Phelps-Roper's writing has a thoughtful, almost scholarly quality that matches Westover's academic voice. She does not demonize her family or their beliefs. She just shows how she outgrew them. That restraint makes the book land with real force.

Heavy by Kiese Laymon book cover

Heavy

Why it's similar

Kiese Laymon's Heavy is a memoir written as a letter to his mother, and it tackles race, body image, abuse, and the American South with a raw honesty that earns comparison to Educated. Like Westover, Laymon writes about a mother who was both his greatest champion and a source of deep pain. The book refuses to separate love from harm, and that complexity gives it a weight that most memoirs lack. Where Educated and Heavy overlap most is in their treatment of secrecy. Both families kept painful truths hidden, and both authors wrote their books partly to break that silence.

Laymon's prose is more lyrical and repetitive than Westover's, circling back to key moments the way memory actually works. He writes about food, gambling, and exercise as coping mechanisms with the same specificity Westover brings to her descriptions of work on the junkyard. This is a demanding, uncomfortable read. It asks more of you than most memoirs dare to.

The Last Days by Ali Millar book cover

The Last Days

Why it's similar

Ali Millar's The Last Days is a memoir about growing up as a Jehovah's Witness in Scotland, and it occupies the same emotional territory as Educated with a different religious backdrop. Millar was taught that the end of the world was imminent, that questioning the faith was a form of spiritual death, and that loyalty to the congregation mattered more than loyalty to yourself. The slow process of pulling away mirrors Westover's own departure from her family's beliefs. This is the most underrated book on this list. Millar writes with a cool, precise voice that lets the horror speak for itself.

She does not shout about what was done to her. She describes it and trusts you to feel the weight. Like Westover, she captures the particular loneliness of being a person who can see the cracks in a system everyone around her accepts. Readers who connected with Educated's themes of religious control, educational deprivation, and the cost of thinking for yourself will find a powerful companion here.

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Tara Westover

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