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!
230 matching books
Show FiltersFilter Results
-
Beautiful Life 230
-
Biography 30
-
Cross Group 47
-
Folklore 3
-
Bolivian 1
-
British 2
-
Chinese 15
-
Creole 1
-
Cuban 2
-
Egyptian 2
-
Emirati 1
-
German 1
-
Ghanaian 1
-
Haitian 2
-
Hmong 2
-
Indian 8
-
Iranian 2
-
Israeli 1
-
Jamaican 2
-
Japanese 8
-
Kenyan 2
-
Kikuyu 1
-
Korean 6
-
Mexican 31
-
Nigerian 1
-
Peruvian 1
-
Puerto Rican 11
-
South Asian 11
-
Sudanese 1
-
Syrian 1
-
Thai 1
-
Tibetan 1
-
Unspecified 110
-
Africa 7
-
Alabama 2
-
Alaska 4
-
Arctic 2
-
Arizona 4
-
Arkansas 1
-
Asia 17
-
Bolivia 1
-
California 23
-
Cambodia 1
-
Cameroon 1
-
China 6
-
Colombia 2
-
Eastern Asia 17
-
England 1
-
Ethiopia 1
-
Europe 1
-
Florida 4
-
Georgia 4
-
Haiti 2
-
Hawaii 7
-
Illinois 7
-
India 2
-
Indiana 1
-
Iowa 1
-
Iran 1
-
Israel 1
-
Japan 7
-
Kansas 1
-
Kenya 2
-
Laos 1
-
Maine 4
-
Maryland 4
-
Mexico 17
-
New York 31
-
Northern America 230
-
Oceania 7
-
Ohio 2
-
Oklahoma 7
-
Peru 1
-
Ryuku 1
-
Senegal 1
-
Sudan 1
-
Taiwan 1
-
Texas 7
-
Thailand 2
-
Virginia 3
-
Zimbabwe 1
-
Activism 14
-
Adoption 6
-
Bi/multilingual 123
-
STEM 9
-
Fiction 188
-
Non-Fiction 36
-
Boy/Man 170
-
Girl/Woman 202
-
Māhū 1
-
Background 14
-
Dominant Main 203
-
Joint Main 23
-
Secondary 230
The peace tree from Hiroshima
A fictionalized account of a bonsai tree that lived with the Yamaki family in Hiroshima, Japan, for more than 300 years before being donated to the National Arboretum in Washington, D.C., in 1976 as a gesture of friendship and peace to celebrate the American Bicentennial
What will you be, Sara Mee?
Will she be an artist? A cook? A writer? Sara Mee is turning one, and her family and friends gather for her tol, or first-birthday celebration. Food and presents abound, but most exciting of all is the traditional Korean prophecy game, called the toljabee, which predicts what Sara Mee will be when she grows up. Celebrates siblings, community, and the blending of traditions. --provided by publisher
Drum, Chavi, drum!
Chavi's music teacher believes that only boys should play drums in Miami's Festival de la Calle Ocho, but Chavi knows she is a good musician and looks for a way to prove it
Crouching tiger
When Ming Da's Chinese grandpa comes to visit, he overcomes his initial embarrassment at his grandfather's traditions and begins to appreciate him
Dario and the whale
When Dario and his mother move to Cape Cod from Brazil, Dario has a hard time making friends since he doesn't speak English well. But one day Dario meets someone else who has just arrived in New England and he doesn't speak any English at all, because he's a right whale! Day after day Dario and the whale meet at the beach. But what will happen when it's time for the whale to migrate?
Seaside dream
At a birthday celebration on the beach, Cora gives her grandmother a special gift and encourages her to make a trip back to her home country, Cape Verde
Tía Isa wants a car
Tía Isa and her niece try to save enough money to buy a car to take the whole family to the beach
Grandma’s gift
The author describes Christmas at his grandmother's apartment in Spanish Harlem the year she introduced him to the Metropolitan Museum of Art and Diego Velazquez's portrait of Juan de Pareja, which has had a profound and lasting effect on him
Grandfather counts
When her maternal grandfather comes from China, Helen, who is biracial, develops a special bond with him despite their age and language differences