Our collection of picture books featuring Black and Indigenous people 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.
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120 matching books
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Any Child 120
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Cross Group 11
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Folklore 1
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Activism 4
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Adoption 1
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Bi/multilingual 120
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Disability 11
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STEM 8
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Fiction 116
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Boy/Man 91
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Girl/Woman 109
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Unspecified 12
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Dominant Main 103
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Joint Main 17
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Secondary 120
No time for monsters
Each time Mamá asks Roberto to help around the house, he claims to be afraid that a monster will take him away
My big sister / Mi hermana mayor
Before and after school, Anita takes wonderful care of her little brother while their parents work in a factory, sewing jeans
Good dream, bad dream
"A father comforts his restive son by telling him that people all over the world have imagined that heroes can help turn their bad dreams into good ones (with bilingual Spanish translation)"--|cProvided by publisher
Baseball on Mars / Béisbol en Marte
After "traveling to Mars" in Roberto's homemade spaceship, Roberto and his father play a game of catch
Adelita and the veggie cousins / Adelita y las primas verduritas
On her first day at a new school, Adelita makes new friends through a lesson on vegetables, including how some vegetables are "cousins" because they share certain characteristics
Let’s salsa / Bailemos salsa
When Estella is banned from the adult exercise dance class, she decides to petition for childrens' rights--to have salsa dance classes at the community center.
My friend Maya loves to dance
Maya loves to dance, leap, pirouette, and bow in tutus and leotards or kente cloth and cowrie shells
Moony Luna
Five-year-old Luna is afraid she will find monsters at her new school until a kind teacher and her new classmates show her that she has nothing to fear
Alicia’s fruity drinks / Las aguas frescas de Alicia
After enjoying a blended fruit drink called aguas frescas during a festival celebrating Mexico's independence, seven-year-old Alicia and her mother make their own at home, then invite Alicia's soccer team over to try them.
Which way should I go?
Joey is a happy Nuu-chah-nulth boy, eager to help and quick to see the bright side of things. But when he loses his beloved grandmother, the sun goes out in his world. Fortunately, she has left something of herself behind a song, which keeps knocking on Joey's heart, and a dance, which urges him to get up on his feet and choose again