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!
395 matching books
Show FiltersFilter Results
-
Any Child 64
-
Beautiful Life 238
-
Biography 64
-
Cross Group 47
-
Folklore 11
-
Incidental 12
-
Africa 3
-
Alaska 19
-
Arctic 89
-
Arizona 6
-
Arkansas 1
-
Asia 2
-
Brazil 2
-
California 13
-
Canada 112
-
Chile 1
-
Colorado 2
-
England 2
-
Europe 3
-
Florida 1
-
France 1
-
Germany 1
-
Hawaii 10
-
Idaho 1
-
Illinois 3
-
Indiana 1
-
Japan 2
-
Kansas 3
-
Kenya 1
-
Maine 4
-
Maryland 1
-
Mexico 11
-
Montana 3
-
New York 8
-
Northern America 301
-
Nunavut 39
-
Oceania 20
-
Ohio 1
-
Oklahoma 16
-
Oregon 1
-
Panama 1
-
Peru 1
-
Polynesia 11
-
Texas 5
-
Unspecified 25
-
Utah 1
-
Virginia 2
-
Activism 21
-
Adoption 7
-
Bi/multilingual 214
-
Disability 10
-
STEM 29
-
Fiction 231
-
Non-Fiction 96
-
Abenaki 1
-
Anishinaabe 19
-
Aztec 3
-
Cheyenne 2
-
Cree 19
-
Dakota 2
-
Dene 4
-
Emberá 1
-
Gwich'in 2
-
Haida 5
-
Hidatsa 1
-
Inca 1
-
Inuit 47
-
Iroquois 6
-
Karuk 1
-
Lakota 7
-
Maidu 1
-
Mandan 1
-
Maya 5
-
Mixtec 1
-
Mohawk 5
-
Métis 6
-
Nahua 7
-
Onondaga 1
-
Osage 2
-
Patuxet 2
-
Pemones 1
-
Pima 1
-
Pipil 2
-
Powhatan 2
-
Pueblo 1
-
Taino 3
-
Tewa 1
-
Tlicho 1
-
Tlingit 3
-
Tolowa 1
-
Triqui 1
-
Tuniit 1
-
Tzeltal 1
-
Unspecified 33
-
Wabanaki 12
-
Waycobah 1
-
Yup'ik 3
-
Yurok 1
-
Zapotec 1
-
Boy/Man 263
-
Girl/Woman 253
-
Māhū 1
-
Unspecified 15
-
Background 26
-
Dominant Main 253
-
Joint Main 85
-
Secondary 246
Mr. Crum’s potato predicament
When a fussy patron sends his order of potatoes back twice, chef George Crum decides to have some fun, based on the true story of the potato chip
The apple tree / Na svgata itlugvi
A little boy plants an apple seed, and as soon as it sprouts the boy can see the apple tree it is meant to be. But the little apple tree isn't so sure. Young and impatient, the tree begins to doubt its calling, especially after apples fail to appear that first October. How can the little boy encourage the tree to give the seasons and years the time to work their magic? Includes Cherokee syllabary
Hungry Johnny
"I like to eat, eat, eat," choruses young Johnny as he watches Grandma at work in the kitchen. Wild rice, fried potatoes, fruit salad, frosted sweet rolls--what a feast! Johnny can hardly contain his excitement. In no time, he'll be digging in with everyone else, filling his belly with all this good food. But wait. First there is the long drive to the community center. And then an even longer Ojibwe prayer. And then--well, young boys know to follow the rules: elders eat first, no matter how hungry the youngsters are. Johnny lingers with Grandma, worried that the tasty treats won't last. Seats at the tables fill and refill; platters are emptied and then replaced. Will it ever be their turn? And will there be enough?
The good rainbow road / Rawa ʻkashtyaaʼtsi hiyaani
Two boys are sent by their people to the west to visit the Shiwana, the spirits of rain and snow, and bring back rain to relieve a drought.
Girls dance, boys fiddle
What incredible pluck! Why does young Metisse insist on playing her fiddle for Grandmother's birthday when everyone knows girls are supposed to dance and leave the fiddling to the boys? It could be because Metisse feels the rhythm of tradition in more than one way.
I Wait / Nipêhon
A young child, her grandmother and mother are going out to pick wild yarrow. As Grandmother gets ready, the child and her mom wait. Grandmother leads the way to the field of blossoms, where they can finally start to pick ... only now they have to wait for Mom! The simple story, written in Cree and English and accompanied by rich acrylic illustrations, shows the patience, love and humor involved as three generations accommodate one another on a family outing.
Pikiq
Pikiq makes an extraordinary discovery in the far North, and when he starts drawing color later appears all over the terrain in his dreams.
Jon’s Tricky Journey / Jaan aullaqsimanirijanga
"Jon loves his life in the North. But when he feels a pain that won't go away, he must go to a children's hospital in the south to find out what is wrong. A doctor there tells Jon he has cancer and will have to stay at the hospital for a while. Suddenly Jon's life is upside down! But with a handful of tricks from the doctors and nurses, and new friends, Jon discovers ways to cope with some of the tricky parts of having cancer. Accompanied by a resource guide for parents and caregivers, including hospital and support information, Jon's Tricky Journey opens a conversation between Inuit children facing a cancer diagnosis and their families to help make a difficult and confusing time more manageable"--|cProvided by publisher
Crossing Bok Chitto
In the 1800s, a Choctaw girl becomes friends with an enslaved black boy from a plantation across the great river, and when she learns that his family is in trouble, she helps them cross to freedom.
Rock & roll highway
"Canadian guitarist and songwriter Robbie Robertson is known mainly for his central role in the musical group the Band. But how did he become one of Rolling Stone's top 100 guitarists of all time? Written by his son Sebastian, this is the story of a rock-and-roll legend's journey through music, beginning when he was taught to play guitar at nine years old on a Native American reservation"--Amazon.com