- ADHD: Raising the Explosive Child by Joanna Brain
- Boy Without Instructions: Surviving the Learning Curve of Parenting a Child with ADHD by Penny Williams (published 2014)
- Breakthroughs in Parenting Children with ADHD While Reducing Stress by Tony J. Bell
- Easy to Love but Hard to Raise by Kay Marner (Author), Adrienne Ehlert Bashista (Author), Edward Hallowell (Foreword), Mary Greene (Contributor)
- Falling through the Ceiling: Our ADHD Family Memoir by Audrey R. Jones and Larry A. Jones, MD (published 2018)
- These stories offer the real-deal reality of living with a house full of ADHD, including the ups, downs and chaos of what happened and the consequences of such. The authors, a married couple of 45 years, offer experience, practical insight and what they learned from counselors, research and their own mistakes to assist people coping with children and adults who are affected by ADHD.
- How Children Thrive: The Practical Science of Raising Independent, Resilient, and Happy Kids by Dr. Mark Berlin (published
- In How Children Thrive, developmental pediatrician and parent Dr. Mark Bertin provides a positive, simple, and empowering approach for raising children of all ages. Bringing together mindfulness, new science on brain development, and the messy reality of being a parent, Dr. Bertin has a created a breakthrough guide that will help children―and their parents―flourish.
- Mindful Parenting for ADHD: A Guide to Cultivating Calm, Reducing Stress, and Helping Children Thrive (A New Harbinger Self-Help Workbook) by Dr. Mark Berlin and Dr. Ari Tuchman (published 2015)
- In this book, a developmental pediatrician presents a proven-effective program for helping both parents and their child with ADHD stay cool and collected while remaining flexible, resilient, and mindful. Bertin addresses the various symptoms of ADHD using non-technical language and a user-friendly format.
- Mindfulness and Self-Compassion for Teen ADHD Build Executive Function Skills, Increase Motivation, and Improve Self-Confidence by Mark Bertin, Karen Bluth, and Russell Barkley (published 2021)
- This unique guide will help teens develop the skills they need to strengthen their executive functioning, foster the self-compassion essential to overcoming self-criticism often caused by ADHD, and gain the confidence and resilience necessary to take control of their ADHD—and their lives.
- Raising Boys with ADHD by Mary Anne Richey and James Forgan (published 2012)
- Smart but Scattered Teens: The Revolutionary “Executive Skills” Approach to Helping Teens Reach Their Potential by Peg Dawson and Richard Guare
- Smart but Scattered: The Revolutionary “Executive Skills” Approach to Helping Kids Reach Their Potential by Peg Dawson and Richard Guare
- Superparenting for ADD: An Innovative Approach to Raising Your Distracted Child by Dr. Ned Hallowell and Dr. Peter Jensen (published 2010)
- The Organized Student: Teaching Children the Skills for Success in School and Beyond by Donna Goldberg (published 2005)
- Understanding Children with ADHD by Alice Bliss
- What Your ADHD Child Wishes You Knew: Working Together to Empower Kids for Success in School and Life by Dr. Sharon Saline (published 2018)
- This is not another book about children with ADHD that simply tells parents what to do and how to discipline. Instead, this remarkable, intimate, and deeply-researched book focuses on the importance and effectiveness of being an empathetically aware communicator, and how working together creates lasting results. Finally, in one place, she gives parents new insights into the minds and feelings of their children with ADHD–and offers them a new, family-tested roadmap for reducing family stress and improving loving connections.
- Why Will No One Play with Me? The Play Better Plan to Help Children of All Ages Make Friends and Thrive by Caroline Maguire and Teresa Baker (published 2019)
- In this groundbreaking book named one of the "Best ADHD Books of All Time" by BookAuthority, Maguire shares her decade-in-the-making protocol—The Play Better Plan—to help parents coach children of any background to connect with others and make friends. With compassion and ease, this program gives parents a tangible, easy-to-follow guide for helping kids develop the executive function and social skills they need to thrive.