Found family has become an even more popular trope in recent years and I’m here for it.
A “found family” forms by choice so this trope is also referred to as “chosen family,” because people who aren’t related choose to love and support one another. But this is different than simply friendship. Found families might celebrate holidays together, take each other to medical appointments, or do any number of the things those related by blood do. Friends might do these things on occasion but there’s a higher commitment level when it comes to a found family.
It might be easy to see the appeal of a chosen family for people who are estranged from their relatives, particularly those in the LGBTQ+ community, but that’s not the only way one is formed. This can develop with work crews, apartment building tenants, motorcycle clubs, or even sports teams. There might be a formal vow, a la some motorcycle clubs, but in most cases, time and proximity forges a strong bond and people realize the connection and community they’ve found themselves in.
Today’s list celebrates the beauty and power of the found family. We’ve got a variety of genres from science fiction to dark academia and even a novel in translation to choose from. Found families aren’t perfect so you’ll see characters navigating difficult circumstances, figuring out how to communicate (or accept hard feedback), and so on. It can take effort to maintain and strengthen the bond you have but these novels show that the effort is ultimately worth it.
Found family novels
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Six of Crows
I enjoyed this novel from bestselling author Leigh Bardugo. A criminal mastermind teams up with an unconventional crew to pull off the heist of the century. They have to break into an extremely secure location and retrieve a scientist and his formula or the world as they know it will be destroyed. With twists and turns aplenty, I enjoyed experiencing another side of Bardugo’s Grishaverse. I enjoyed this on audio.
More info →Every Heart a Doorway
The Gilded Wolves
The View from Penthouse B
If We Were Villains
The Long Way to a Small, Angry Planet (Wayfarers Book 1)
Love at First
One Last Stop
Honey Girl
The Cartographers
Babel: Or the Necessity of Violence: An Arcane History of the Oxford Translators’ Revolution
A Certain Appeal
Vera Wong’s Unsolicited Advice for Murderers
Kitchen
Light From Uncommon Stars
Do you have a favorite found family novel? Please tell us about it in the comments section!
P.S. 20 favorite LGBTQ+ novels and memoirs and 9 nonfiction books that will make you a better friend.























31 comments
One of my favorite “found family” stories is one from several years ago, The Ones Who Matter Most by Rachael Herron. It’s a friendship that becomes a true family and I just remember really loving the characters and how they supported each other.
I’m alway happy to see Elinor Lipman on a list. Read all her books! When Covid shut us down I decided to read all the Lipmans I owned. Then I ordered the few I didn’t have. They were such a welcome respite from the grim news—light and funny and full of characters to love. Her worlds kept me going.
I love a good found family novel -some intriguing titles on this list! I also love “A Gentleman in Moscow” by Amor Towles and “This Tender Land” by William Kent Krueger.
Totally not the right season at the moment, but The Christmas Orphans Club is a wonderful found family novel. It has all my favorite holiday season tropes—found family, a one-day-each-year timeline, and it’s a love letter to NYC.
I absolutely loved Vera Wong’s Unsolicited Advice for Murderers. Have recommended it to so many people. I listened to audio and the narrator was fabulous. Made the book come alive and at many points I was laughing out loud on my walks, so sure the neighbors thought I was crazy!! Highly recommend.
Omg when I clicked the link to get here, “angry planet”, “one last stop”, and “six of crows” literally all popped into my mind before I even read the list! This is a great list, but I especially co-sign for anything by Becky Chambers; nearly every book she rights is such a tender study on what it means to be human and be in a family. I’m not normally a huge sci-fi fan but she’s just so darn good!
I just read Allow Me to Introduce Myself by Onyi Nwabineli. I think this book needs more buzz. The main character is supported by two friends in such a beautiful way.
I recently finished The Garden of Small Beginnings because you Anne, had recommended it as a funny book. Not only funny, but a wonderful found family story. Loved it!
Came here to comment the same thing! Love that book so much!
House on the Cerulean Sea! It’s an amazing found family story and the audiobook narration is spectacular with all the different characters’ voices.
Station Eleven sprang to mind. This is a fun list Anne. Thanks.
A bit of a throwback, but Tales of the City is very much a found family series. I love Six of Crows and Small Angry Planet, and jotted down several other titles from this list!
I loved Don’t Let Me Go, by Catherine Ryan Hyde, about how a community within an apartment complex come together to forge a family for a child who’s mother is battling addiction. It’s a beautiful story.
The very secret society of irregular witches, a wonderful book about found family and with a nice dose of magic
I thoroughly enjoyed Vera Wong and her escapades!
I hadn’t really thought about “found family” as a trope, but I realize it’s one I like very much. There just seems to be such possibility for hope in these stories. I recommend Morning in this Broken World.
The Wayward Children series by Seanan McGuire is AMAZING!!! The audiobook version is excellent also. It can be somewhat dark but the found family storylines that she weaves are perfection.
There are so many books on this list, I’m adding to my TBR list, right away! The first book I thought of was The People We Keep by Allison Larkin. I read this book about 2 1/2 years ago and still think about it often!
One of my favourite books from last year was Still Life by Sarah Winman. British soldier Ulysses does a kindness for a man in Florence and in return is willed his house. Although he’s not biologically related to any of the people who go with him or end up living with him they are most definitely family.
I agree it hits all the benchmarks of a found family. It’s beautifully written and heartfelt. You feel the family come off the pages. You know them. It’s one of my recent favorites and highly recommended particularly if you are drawn to generational narratives. It travels time well.
This is the one I had in mind. This is a top ten book of all time for me and I love the family they built.
Great list! One of my personal faves found family novels is Winter Solstice by Rosamunde Pilcher.
Yes!!! Love this book for this exact reason!
Found Family is my favorite Trope, and the Wayfarers series by Becky Chanmbers handles this trope beautifully. Some other books in this trope are:
Legends & Lattes by Travis Baldree;
The House in the Cerulean Sea by TJ Klune;
A Man Called Ove by Fredrik Backman;
The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society by Mary Anne Shaffer.
Patricia Wood’s The Lottery, has a strong “found family” element, as do many of Alexander McCall Smith’s works, esp. La’s Orchestra Saves the World (set during WWII). While about so many other topics, the saving-grace features of A Gentleman in Moscow by Amor Towles is its found family element.
I loved Vera Wong. I laughed,I identified with her and the family she made. May I add Incredibly bright creatures. Yes Marcellus was an octopus, but look at the people he brought together.
My kids and I are reading the Percy Jackson books together for the first time and I think those are fabulous found family books.
Also Alexandra brackens Darkest Mind series for anyone after some YA dystopia!
And please don’t miss the 2024 Summer Reading Guide’s book: How to Read a Book by Monica Wood. Three different and marvelous characters find the next chapter in their lives and their own version of family. Unforgettable!
Broken For You by Stephanie Kallas has an elderly woman and young woman who fill the holes in each other’s lives; The Rose Code by Kate Quinn follows 3 women who become found family (one of my fave tropes); We Begin at the End by Chris Whitaker – a man befriends a preteen with attitude & both have problems to resolve as they become family. All great reads.
Adding Wallace Stegner’s Crossing to Safety to the list – here’s how someone described it: “Two young couples meet in 1937 as lowest-rung members of the University of Wisconsin faculty at Madison. They fall into friendship and, for the rest of their lives, through ups and downs, remain deeply bonded”. The family-like friendsip is at the center of the novel.
I just finished The Sweet Spot by Amy Poeppel. It’s a charming and slightly chaotic found family story. Hello Beautiful by Ann Napolitano fits in this genre, too. I love stories about friends who become family!
I totally agree that Sweet Spot fits this too!! I want to read Hello Beautiful…it’s been on my shelf!
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