
Our collection of picture books featuring Black and Indigenous Peoples and People of Color (BIPOC) is available to the public.
*Inclusion of a title in the collection DOES NOT EQUAL a recommendation.*
Click here for more on book evaluation.
Find titles using a keyword search below (e.g. adoption, birthday, holidays, etc.), or by selecting one or a combination of filters on the left-hand sidebar below.
1368 matching books
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Picture Book 1057
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Early Reader 12
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Chapter Book 47
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Standard Novel 182
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Poetry 2
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Americas 1368
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Central America 108
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Northern America 1246
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Canada 140
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Alabama 39
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Alaska 10
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Arizona 19
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Arkansas 9
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California 168
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Colorado 3
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Delaware 2
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Florida 35
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Georgia 24
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Hawaii 16
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Idaho 3
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Illinois 37
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Indiana 9
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Iowa 4
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Kansas 9
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Kentucky 11
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Louisiana 29
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Maine 9
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Maryland 20
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Michigan 24
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Minnesota 21
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Mississippi 15
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Missouri 10
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Montana 3
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Nevada 6
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New Jersey 23
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New Mexico 15
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New York 198
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Ohio 20
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Oklahoma 13
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Oregon 10
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Pennsylvania 27
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Tennessee 22
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Texas 48
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Utah 3
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Vermont 2
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Virginia 26
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Ancient 1
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Arctic 44
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Future 2
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Imaginary 10
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Any Child/Teen 261
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Cross Group 375
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Folklore 57
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Incidental 51
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LGBTQIAP2S+ 76
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Closeting 12
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Coming Out 19
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Homophobia 18
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Mind/Body 159
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Body Image 27
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Grief/Loss 74
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Puberty 5
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Self-hatred 15
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Race-Related 167
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Colorism 6
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Racism 89
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Tokenism 4
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Homesickness 22
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Afghan 5
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Algerian 1
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Antiguan 2
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Assyrian 1
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Austrian 1
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Belizean 1
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Bengali 2
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Bolivian 1
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Brazilian 13
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British 11
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Burmese 1
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Canadian 30
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Caribbean 13
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Chilean 3
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Chinese 59
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Creole 6
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Croatian 1
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Cuban 21
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Dominican 20
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Dutch 2
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Egyptian 4
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Emirati 1
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French 8
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German 15
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Ghanaian 5
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Guatemalan 10
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Guinean 1
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Haitian 21
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Hmong 7
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Honduran 3
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Indian 38
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Iranian 10
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Irish 11
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Israeli 3
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Italian 7
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Jamaican 16
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Japanese 45
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Kenyan 6
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Korean 37
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Kuwaiti 1
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Latvian 1
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Lebanese 4
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Malay 1
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Malian 1
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Mexican 143
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Multiethnic 70
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Nigerian 5
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Nigerien 1
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Pakistani 16
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Persian 3
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Peruvian 7
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Polish 4
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Puerto Rican 51
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Punjabi 1
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Romanian 1
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Russian 10
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Salvadoran 12
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Samoan 1
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Scottish 2
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Slovak 1
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Somali 3
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South Asian 22
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Spanish 9
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Sudanese 2
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Swede 1
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Syrian 9
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Taiwanese 11
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Thai 1
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Tibetan 1
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Trinidadian 11
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Unspecified 804
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Vietnamese 18
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Yoruba 2
Tribal Affiliation / Homelands
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Abenaki 1
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Anishinaabe 11
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Aztec 1
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Bribri 1
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Cheyenne 2
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Cree 14
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Dene 2
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Haida 1
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Hidatsa 2
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Inca 1
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Inuit 14
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Iroquois 4
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Lakota 4
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Maidu 1
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Maya 6
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Mixtec 1
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Mohawk 4
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Métis 11
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Nahua 5
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Onondaga 1
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Osage 1
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Patuxet 2
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Pemones 1
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Pima 1
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Pipil 2
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Powhatan 2
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Pueblo 1
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Quechua 1
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Taino 2
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Tewa 1
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Tlingit 2
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Tuniit 1
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Unspecified 21
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Wabanaki 8
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Yup’ik 1
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Zapotec 1
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DREAMers 1
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Immigrants 297
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Migrants 6
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Girls/Women 1189
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Unspecified 46
Sexual Orientation / Relationship Representation
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Bi+/M-Spec 28
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Bisexual 16
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Gay 29
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Heterosexual 173
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Lesbian 36
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Queer 20
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Questioning 10
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Dominant Main 1164
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Joint Main 186
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Secondary 1368

Clear and Bright: A Ching Ming Festival Story
“In the spring, Lily and her relatives gather for the Ching Ming Festival to honor their beloved ancestors. The day is full of joy and community, but also reverence and remembrance. As Lily zips between playing Chinese checkers with her cousin and helping her grandparents prepare a delicious meal for the family, a second narrative unfolds to reveal the sacrifices her great-great-grandpa had to make to settle in America. Both a tale honoring the efforts of the first Chinese American immigrants and a story of a family coming together, Clear and Bright is a celebration of Chinese heritage, cultural tradition, and the ancestral love that spans generations.” — publisher

Fatima the Activist
“At Palm Valley Elementary School, the female students are being discriminated against by the other male students. A young girl named Fatima has had enough of this mistreatment, and decides she wants to do something about it. Fatima gathers all of the girl students to host a protest. The girls work together to demand equality. Fatima the Activist is the blueprint for teaching our young children about equality and effective ways to achieve it.” — publisher

Castle of the Cursed
“After a mysterious attack claims the lives of her parents, all Estela has left is her determination to solve the case. Suffering from survivor’s guilt so intense that she might be losing her grip on reality, she accepts an invitation to live overseas with an estranged aunt at their ancestral Spanish castle, la Sombra. Beneath its gothic façade, la Sombra harbors a trove of family secrets, and Estela begins to suspect her parents’ deaths may be linked to their past. Her investigation takes a supernatural turn when she crosses paths with a silver-eyed boy only she can see. Estela worries Sebastián is a hallucination, but he claims he’s been trapped in the castle. They grudgingly team up to find answers and as their investigation ignites, so does a romance, mistrust twined with every caress. As the mysteries pile up, it feels to Estela like everyone in the tiny town of Oscuro is lying and that whoever was behind the attack has followed her to Spain. The deeper she ventures into la Sombra’s secrets, the more certain she becomes that the suspect she’s chasing has already found her . . . and they’re closer than she ever realized.” — publisher

Merry Christmas, Anna Hibiscus!
“Anna Hibiscus has never been away from her big white house in Nigeria, where baby brothers, many cousins, parents, aunties, uncles, and grandparents are always nearby. But now she’s flying overseas on her own to visit Granny Canada and see snow for the first time! When she lands at the airport, Anna finds herself amid a sea of white faces in a place that is breathtakingly cold. Canada is very different, but Anna learns how to pull on toasty layers of clothing, warms up to Granny’s large dog (who does not live in a pack and bite people), hones her new talent for sledding, and celebrates cozy Christmas rituals—all while keenly missing her cousins.” — publisher

Plátanos Go with Everything
“Plátanos are Yesenia’s favorite food. They can be sweet and sugary, or salty and savory. And they’re a part of almost every meal her Dominican family makes. Stop by her apartment and find out why plátanos go with everything—especially love!” — publisher

The Haunted Blizzard
“A teenage girl walks home in a burgeoning blizzard, happy to have an unexpected snow day. Ignoring an Elder’s warning about the terror the blizzard holds, she finds herself alone in her home with an unseen presence stalking and tormenting her. What does it want? And will she survive?” — publisher

My Smock Is a Story
“When a young boy receives his first smock as a gift, his Dada tells him that every smock has a special story. Will his smock make him as joyful as a harvest dancer? Or as powerful as his royal elders, the Dagomba? In his smock, what will his story be?” — publisher

Maizy Chen’s Last Chance
“Twelve year-old Maizy discovers her family’s Chinese restaurant is full of secrets in this irresistible novel that celebrates food, fortune, and family.” — publisher

Barely Floating
“Natalia de la Cruz Rivera y Santiago, also known as Nat, was swimming neighborhood kids out of their money at the local Boyle Heights pool when her life changed. The L.A. Mermaids performed, emerging out of the water with matching sequined swimsuits, and it was then that synchronized swimming stole her heart. The problem? Her activist mom and professor dad think it’s a sport with too much emphasis on looks—on being thin and white. Nat grew up the youngest in a house full of boys, so she knows how to fight for what she wants, using her anger to fuel her. People often underestimate her swimming skills when they see her stomach rolls, but she knows better than to worry about what people think. Sometimes, she feels more like a submarine than a mermaid, but she wonders if she could be both.” — publisher

Gone Wolf
“In the future, a Black girl known only as Inmate Eleven is kept confined—to be used as a biological match for the president’s son, should he fall ill. She is called a Blue—the color of sadness. She lives in a small-small room with her dog, who is going wolf more often—he’s pacing and imagining he’s free. Inmate Eleven wants to go wolf too—she wants to know why she feels so blue and what is beyond her small-small room. In the present, Imogen lives outside of Washington DC. The pandemic has distanced her from everyone but her mother and her therapist. Imogen has intense phobias and nightmares of confinement. Her two older brothers used to help her, but now she’s on her own, until a college student helps her see the difference between being Blue and sad, and Black and empowered.” — publisher