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.
Find titles using a keyword search below (e.g. adoption, birthday, holidays, etc.), or by selecting one or a combination of filters on the lefthand sidebar below.
First time here? Start here!
237 matching books
Show FiltersFilter Results
-
Any Child 45
-
Biography 132
-
Cross Group 57
-
Folklore 2
-
Incidental 13
-
Africa 12
-
Alabama 8
-
Angola 1
-
Antigua 1
-
Arctic 2
-
Arizona 2
-
Arkansas 5
-
Asia 10
-
Barbados 3
-
Brazil 2
-
California 24
-
Cameroon 1
-
Canada 7
-
Caribbean 13
-
China 4
-
Cuba 4
-
Delaware 1
-
Egypt 2
-
England 3
-
Europe 16
-
Florida 4
-
France 7
-
Georgia 6
-
Germany 3
-
Ghana 2
-
Greece 1
-
Guyana 1
-
Haiti 2
-
Hawaii 1
-
Illinois 9
-
India 4
-
Iowa 2
-
Iran 2
-
Iraq 1
-
Israel 1
-
Italy 2
-
Japan 3
-
Kansas 2
-
Kentucky 3
-
Kenya 2
-
Maine 2
-
Maryland 5
-
Mexico 12
-
Michigan 4
-
Missouri 7
-
Mongolia 1
-
Morocco 2
-
Nevada 1
-
New York 237
-
Nigeria 1
-
Northern America 225
-
Oceania 3
-
Ohio 4
-
Oklahoma 4
-
Pakistan 2
-
Peru 2
-
Poland 1
-
Romania 1
-
Russia 1
-
Senegal 1
-
Somalia 1
-
Sudan 1
-
Tanzania 1
-
Texas 4
-
Thailand 1
-
Virginia 4
-
Activism 53
-
Disability 19
-
STEM 9
-
Fiction 104
-
Non-Fiction 132
-
Boy/Man 160
-
Girl/Woman 161
-
Unspecified 12
-
Background 24
-
Dominant Main 175
-
Joint Main 31
-
Secondary 142
From Manila with Love
"What does it mean to "come home" for the first time? Here is a story that tenderly captures the incomparable joy of the balikbayan experience." -- publisher
Ira’s Shakespeare dream
"A biography chronicling the life of Ira Aldridge, an African American actor who is considered to be one of the greatest Shakespearean actors of the nineteenth century. Includes afterword and author's sources"--|cProvided by publisher
Lizard from the park
When a lizard hatches from the egg Leonard finds in the park, he names it Buster and takes it all around the city, but Buster grows bigger and bigger until Leonard realizes he must devise a way to return his pet to the deepest, darkest part of the park and set him free
Love is in the hair
Carter's up in the middle of the night, too excited to sleep: her baby sister is being born! She asks her Uncle Marcus to tell her some soothing stories about the beautiful things in his dreadlocks so she can relax and rest. --Page 4 of cover
Mayann’s train ride
"Nine-year-old Mayann Francis and her family are travelling from their home in Cape Breton to New York City by train. Everything is exciting to young Mayann, from the beds that fold down to the stop in Montreal to visit friends. Most exciting of all is the chance to show off her brand new purse. When the Francis family arrives in big, bustling New York City, Mayann visits with relatives, goes to the zoo, and rides the subway. She even receives a beautiful black doll, something she has never seen before. But one subway ride, she loses her beautiful purse. At first she's heartbroken, but she just might learn a lesson that makes the whole trip worthwhile"--Back cover
My name is Truth
A vibrantly illustrated story of how former slave Isabella Baumfree transformed herself into the preacher and orator Sojourner Truth, one of the most inspiring and important figures of the abolitionist and women's rights movements.- -|c(Source of description not identified)
Sofi and the magic, musical mural
On the way back from the bodega, Sofia is drawn into a life-like mural of Old San Juan where she dances, sings, and conquers her fear of the vejigante before being called back to the barrio by her mother.
The book itch
Relates the story of the National Memorial African Bookstore, founded in Harlem by Louis Michaux in 1939, as seen from the perspective of Louis Michaux Jr., who met famous men like Muhammad Ali and Malcolm X while helping there
A dance like starlight
A young girl growing up in Harlem in the 1950s, whose mother cleans and stitches costumes for a ballet company, dreams of becoming a prima ballerina one day, and is thrilled to see a performance of Janet Collins, the first "colored" prima ballerina