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
Jim Thorpe’s bright path
A biography of Native American athlete Jim Thorpe, focusing on how his boyhood education set the stage for his athletic achievements which gained him international fame and Olympic gold medals. Author's note details Thorpe's life after college.
Tasunka
Curiosity leads a young warrior to track a new animal. It leads him far from home, but at last he finds a herd of the strange new creatures. They are horses that shimmer with color and run swift as the wind. The Lakota capture and tame them, and the people grow rich and powerful. They become filled with pride. With their newfound strength they rule over the plains. Then the Great Spirit, who gave the gift of the horse, takes it away.
Putuguq & Kublu
"Putuguq and Kublu are a sister and brother who cannot get along. They love to pull pranks and one-up each other every chance they get! When one of Putuguq's pranks does not go as planned, the feuding siblings find themselves on the land with their grandfather, learning a bit about Inuit history--between throwing snowballs, that is"-- |cProvided by publisher
How Nivi got her names
Nivi has always known that her names are special, but she does not know where they came from. So, one sunny afternoon, Nivi decides to ask her mom how she got her names. The stories of the people Nivi is named after lead her to an understanding of traditional Inuit naming practices and knowledge of what those practices mean to Inuit. How Nivi Got Her Names is an easy-to-understand introduction to traditional Inuit naming, with a story that touches on Inuit custom adoption [an adoption in which a pregnant woman provides her child to someone who needs a child].
What’s my superpower?
Nalvana feels like all of her friends have some type of superpower. She has friends with super speed (who always beat her in races), friends with super strength (who can dangle from the monkey bars for hours), and friends who are better than she is at a million other things. Nalvana thinks she must be the only kid in town without a superpower. But then her mom shows Nalvana that she is unique and special--and that her superpower was right in front of her all along.
The people of the sea
While playing at the beach, Donald and his friends see a woman in the water and learn about the arnajuinnaq from their parents and grandparents.
The Aztec empire
"Who were the Aztecs? Why did they build their temples? When did they discover chocolate? And what was daily life like in Mesoamerica? Find out in this fact-filled book, with map and timeline, which makes 500 years of history visible at a glance"--Back cover
A true princess of Hawai’i
"Nani learns that there is more to being a princess than fine clothes when a real Hawaiian princess comes to save the town of Hilo from Mauna Loa's volcanic lava flow. Based on the historical events of the 1880-1881 eruption of Mauna Loa on the Island of Hawai'i"--Provided by publisher
“Fall in line, Holden!”
At a very strict school in Indigenous Nation, everyone but Holden stays in line until they reach the door at the end of the school day.
The good luck cat
Because her good luck cat Woogie has already used up eight of his nine lives in narrow escapes from disaster, a Native American girl worries when he disappears.