Every so often, someone will try to call out the Tuttle Twins books for giving Ethan and Emily too much freedom.
They’ll say things like, “It’s not realistic for kids to go on adventures like this or be treated like they’re capable of understanding economics or politics. It’s not realistic that adults would listen to them like the adults in these stories do.”
But that’s exactly the point.
The Tuttle Twins books aren’t meant to be a reflection of our current reality. They’re meant to challenge it.
They’re meant to model a world in which kids are respected, listened to, given the chance to contribute, and encouraged to think critically about the world around them — even when it means questioning those in charge.
Especially when it means that.
If a teacher is pushing propaganda in the classroom, your child should feel confident enough to push back.
If a rule doesn’t make sense, I want them to feel like they can challenge it—not just submit and obey.
We don’t write these books to help create compliant little cogs in a system that’s failing.
We’re trying to help parents raise kids who have the courage, character, and clarity to build something better.
So yes! We write books about kids who question adults, who challenge unjust authority, and who take real action in the real world.
Because the only way we get a better world is by raising kids who believe it’s possible and are brave enough to go out and make it happen.
Right now, we’re offering a massive Easter Bundle to help more families start teaching these ideas at home.
📚 You’ll get our complete Children’s Series (14-book combo pack) plus our powerful 2-book History Series—all with digital extras—for just $198 (that’s a whopping $613 value)!
👉 Click here to grab the Easter Bundle while it lasts!
This isn’t just a great deal on great resources for your family. It’s a statement:
My kids will not be raised to obey without question.
They’ll be raised to think.
— Connor