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If âGirls Earn Less,â Why Do I Have More Money?
If âGirls Earn Less,â Why Do I Have More Money?
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đ WaitâWant the Bonus Chapters Too?
We had to cut several pages to fit the print sizeâŚ
But when you buy from this page, youâll get them for free as a downloadable bonus:
đĽ âThe Lost Chaptersâ â Included With Your Order
â
Bonus Chapter: âJobs With Green Lightsâ
Not sure what careers will still be around when you grow up? This deleted list shows 20 jobs that companies canât hire fast enough â plus how to spot a âgreen lightâ career, even if itâs not invented yet.
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Bonus Chapter: âWhat About AI?â
Will robots take your job? This bonus chapter helps kids understand how tools like AI actually work â and what human skills will still matter most in the future (like storytelling, building trust, and fixing real-world stuff!).
Exclusive to this store only â not available anywhere else.
Sent instantly as a downloadable PDF when you order here.
My Daughter Said Boys Make More MoneyâSo We Wrote a Book About It
She didnât need more slogans. She needed a real conversation. So we made oneâon paper.
đˇÂ The Story That Sparked It All
She was 10 years old.
We were at the kitchen table catching up over dinner and she said something Iâll never forget:
âI wish I were a boy⌠boys make more money.â
At first, I laughed.
But she wasnât joking. She meant it.
So I asked, "Where did you hear that?"
Not from the news. Not from TikTok.
She said she read it in one of those Cat Kid books by the same author behind Dog Man. You know, the guy who just got a Hollywood movie deal and whose books every kid seems to be reading right now.
Thatâs when I knew we had to do something different.
We didnât argue. We didnât shut it down.
We had a real conversationâabout what really affects how much someone earns:
đˇ Time worked
đˇ Job danger
đˇ Career choices
đˇ Personal priorities
đˇ Risk, tradeoffs, and effort
That conversation turned into a childrenâs book.
đ§ Meet Mia.
Miaâs curious.
Sheâs funny, bold, and way too smart to accept something just because an adult said it.
When her teacher mentions that boys make more money than girls, Mia starts paying attentionâand something doesnât add up.
So she speaks up.
Asks a hard question.
And ends up back in the principalâs office. Again!
With help from her dad, Mia starts digging for the truthâand learns way more than anyone expected.
đ If âGirls Earn Less,â Why Do I Have More Money?
A bold, honest story about thinking for yourself, asking better questions, and learning how the world really works.
No lectures. No finger-pointing. Just facts, curiosity, and critical thinkingâtold in a way kids can actually understand.
đˇÂ Who This Book Is For
⢠Ages 8â12 (but older kids and adults love it too)
⢠Homeschool families tired of one-sided narratives
⢠Parents who want facts over slogans
⢠Fans of The Tuttle Twins, Brave Books, or any bold childrenâs book that dares to say something real
⢠Kids who ask great questionsâand parents who want better answers
đĄ What Youâll Get
âď¸ A smart, funny, illustrated story
âď¸ Conversation starters for families and classrooms
âď¸ Bonus content that builds real-world thinking
âď¸ A starting point for fact-based, judgment-free learning
đ Ready to Read the Book They Wonât Teach in School?
Start the conversation your kid wonât have in the classroom. You donât need another agenda. Just a real storyâwith humor, honesty, and heart.
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