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!
3122 matching books
Show FiltersFilter Results
-
Any Child 1261
-
Beautiful Life 865
-
Biography 442
-
Cross Group 602
-
Folklore 204
-
Incidental 211
-
Informational 190
-
Afghan 12
-
Antiguan 1
-
Assyrian 1
-
Basotho 1
-
Belizean 1
-
Bengali 3
-
Bolivian 1
-
Brazilian 15
-
British 13
-
Burmese 1
-
Canadian 20
-
Caribbean 15
-
Chilean 4
-
Chinese 126
-
Creole 1
-
Cuban 12
-
Czech 1
-
Dominican 11
-
Dutch 2
-
Egyptian 13
-
Emirati 2
-
Eritrean 2
-
Ethiopian 38
-
French 6
-
Gambian 2
-
German 14
-
Ghanaian 11
-
Greek 2
-
Guatemalan 11
-
Guinean 1
-
Guyanese 3
-
Haitian 13
-
Hmong 6
-
Honduran 2
-
Igbo 3
-
Indian 110
-
Iranian 9
-
Iraqi 8
-
Irish 6
-
Israeli 6
-
Italian 2
-
Ivorian 1
-
Jamaican 16
-
Japanese 89
-
Kenyan 29
-
Kikuyu 1
-
Korean 33
-
Kurdish 1
-
Kuwaiti 2
-
Laotian 2
-
Latvian 1
-
Lebanese 3
-
Malawian 2
-
Malay 2
-
Malian 2
-
Mexican 138
-
Moroccan 6
-
Multiethnic 131
-
Ndebele 1
-
Nepalese 5
-
Nigerian 16
-
Nigerien 3
-
Pakistani 18
-
Persian 4
-
Peruvian 8
-
Polish 5
-
Puerto Rican 32
-
Punjabi 1
-
Roman 1
-
Romani 2
-
Russian 9
-
Salvadoran 12
-
Scottish 6
-
Slovak 1
-
Somali 4
-
South Asian 150
-
Spanish 5
-
Sudanese 4
-
Swede 2
-
Syrian 9
-
Tanzanian 12
-
Thai 6
-
Tibetan 2
-
Turkish 4
-
Ugandan 4
-
Unspecified 2016
-
Uyghur 1
-
Vietnamese 13
-
Xhosa 2
-
Yoruba 1
-
Afghanistan 12
-
Africa 149
-
Alabama 45
-
Alaska 13
-
Antigua 1
-
Arctic 61
-
Arizona 13
-
Arkansas 9
-
Asia 278
-
Bahamas 1
-
Bali 1
-
Barbados 3
-
Belize 1
-
Bhutan 3
-
Bolivia 1
-
Brazil 12
-
California 101
-
Cambodia 7
-
Cameroon 3
-
Canada 119
-
Caribbean 58
-
Chile 4
-
China 72
-
Colombia 7
-
Colorado 1
-
Cuba 8
-
Dominica 1
-
Eastern Asia 134
-
Ecuador 3
-
Egypt 15
-
England 12
-
Eritrea 2
-
Ethiopia 39
-
Europe 50
-
Finland 1
-
Florida 16
-
France 23
-
Gambia 1
-
Georgia 24
-
Germany 8
-
Ghana 10
-
Greece 3
-
Grenada 1
-
Guyana 1
-
Haiti 10
-
Hawaii 19
-
Honduras 2
-
Illinois 29
-
Imaginary 119
-
India 64
-
Indiana 3
-
Iowa 3
-
Iran 7
-
Iraq 9
-
Ireland 1
-
Israel 9
-
Italy 4
-
Jamaica 3
-
Japan 51
-
Jordan 1
-
Kansas 10
-
Kentucky 9
-
Kenya 29
-
Kuwait 1
-
Laos 4
-
Lebanon 3
-
Libya 1
-
Louisiana 21
-
Maine 7
-
Malawi 2
-
Malaysia 2
-
Mali 2
-
Maryland 15
-
Mexico 76
-
Michigan 14
-
Minnesota 12
-
Mississippi 15
-
Missouri 10
-
Mongolia 2
-
Montana 2
-
Morocco 6
-
Nebraska 1
-
Nepal 6
-
Nevada 2
-
New Jersey 13
-
New Mexico 11
-
New York 161
-
Niger 1
-
Nigeria 11
-
Northern America 958
-
Norway 2
-
Nunavut 26
-
Oceania 29
-
Ohio 10
-
Oklahoma 13
-
Oregon 3
-
Outerspace 26
-
Pakistan 13
-
Paraguay 1
-
Pennsylvania 20
-
Peru 5
-
Philippines 12
-
Poland 2
-
Polynesia 19
-
Portugal 2
-
Puerto Rico 15
-
Russia 3
-
Ryuku 1
-
Scotland 1
-
Senegal 2
-
Somalia 4
-
South Africa 19
-
Southern Asia 112
-
Spain 5
-
Sudan 2
-
Sweden 1
-
Syria 5
-
Taiwan 2
-
Tanzania 2
-
Tennessee 26
-
Texas 31
-
Thailand 10
-
Uganda 4
-
Unspecified 1430
-
Utah 1
-
Vietnam 8
-
Virginia 24
-
Western Asia 54
-
Zambia 1
-
Zimbabwe 2
-
Activism 279
-
Adoption 38
-
Bi/multilingual 738
-
Disability 227
-
Diverse Family 364
-
LGBTQIAP2S 61
-
STEM 218
-
Fiction 2507
-
Non-Fiction 571
-
Abenaki 1
-
Anishinaabe 14
-
Aztec 1
-
Cheyenne 1
-
Cree 14
-
Dakota 2
-
Dene 2
-
Gwich'in 2
-
Haida 3
-
Hidatsa 1
-
Inca 1
-
Inuit 30
-
Iroquois 4
-
Lakota 2
-
Maidu 1
-
Maya 4
-
Mixtec 1
-
Mohawk 3
-
Métis 5
-
Nahua 4
-
Osage 2
-
Pemones 1
-
Pipil 2
-
Powhatan 2
-
Taino 1
-
Tewa 1
-
Tlicho 1
-
Tlingit 3
-
Unspecified 26
-
Wabanaki 8
-
Waycobah 1
-
Yup'ik 2
-
Zapotec 1
-
Boy/Man 2066
-
Girl/Woman 3122
-
Intersex 2
-
Māhū 1
-
Non-Binary 18
-
Transgender 21
-
Unspecified 248
-
Background 352
-
Dominant Main 2307
-
Joint Main 691
-
Secondary 2235
The riddlemaster
"Anouk, Ben and Cara dream of a fabulous treasure buried on an island across the harbour. A mysterious old man offers them passage, but only if they can solve seven vexing riddles. If they succeed, a strange and magical prize awaits them"--Back cover
More-igami
"Joey loves things that fold: maps, bed, accordions, you name it. When a classmate's mother turns a plain piece of paper into a beautiful origami crane, his eyes pop. Maybe he can learn origami, too. But it's going to take practice --on his homework, the newspaper, the thirty-eight dollars in his mother's purse. ... Enough! No more folding! How can Joey become an origami master if he can't practice? Happily, he finds a way--and perhaps a chance to make a new friend while he's at it"--Dust jacket
Home at last
When she and her family move from Mexico to the United States, eight-year-old Ana helps her mother adjust to the new situation by encouraging her to learn English
Those shoes
Jeremy, who longs to have the black high tops that everyone at school seems to have but his grandmother cannot afford, is excited when he sees them for sale in a thrift shop and decides to buy them even though they are the wrong size
The tea party in the woods
As Kikko goes through the woods to bring a pie to her grandmother, she happens upon a home full of animals and joins their tea party
My brother Martin
Looks at the early life of Martin Luther King, Jr., as seen through the eyes of his older sister. Looks at the early life of Martin Luther King, Jr., as seen through the eyes of his older sister. "Mother Dear, one day I'm going to turn this world upside down." Long before he became a world-famous dreamer, Martin Luther King Jr. was a little boy who played jokes and practiced the piano and made friends without considering race. But growing up in the segregated South of the 1930s taught young Martin a bitter lesson--little white children and little black children were not to play with one another. Martin decided then and there that something had to be done. And so he began the journey that would change the course of American history
What does a Muslim look like?
When Jack and Jane make new friends at school, they are surprised to learn that they are Muslim. Their curiosity leads them to discover that Muslims come in all colors and hail from various backgrounds from around the world
The Nian monster
"The legendary Nian monster has returned at Chinese New Year. Nian is intent on devouring Shanghai, starting with young Xingling! But Xingling is clever and thinks quickly to outwit him with Chinese New Year traditions"-- |cProvided by publisher
The way we do it in Japan
Gregory experiences a new way of life when he moves to Japan with his American mother and his Japanese father.
A squiggly story
A young boy wants to write a story, just like his big sister. But there's a problem, he tells her. Though he knows his letters, he doesn't know many words. His sister patiently explains, "Every story starts with a single word and every word starts with a single letter. Why don't you start there, with a letter?" So the boy tries. He writes a letter. An easy letter. The letter I. And from that one skinny letter, the story grows, and the little boy discovers that all of us, including him, have what we need to write our own perfect story