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.
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394 matching books
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Any Child 394
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Cross Group 156
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Folklore 6
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Activism 5
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Adoption 7
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Disability 35
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Diverse Family 156
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LGBTQIAP2S 25
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STEM 22
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Fiction 394
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Boy/Man 272
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Girl/Woman 323
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Unspecified 110
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Background 43
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Dominant Main 246
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Joint Main 145
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Secondary 284
I walk with Vanessa
An elementary school girl witnesses the bullying of another girl, but she is not sure how to help.
My bed is an air balloon
This book has two front covers. The text can be read from front to back and vice versa. The mirror form poem meets in the middle in a stunning centerpiece image as the two children in the story (twins, one in an air balloon, the other a sailing boat) meet in the clouds!--Amazon.com
A bear hug at bedtime
A child encounters tigers, lobsters, bears and a menagerie of other creatures throughout the day...but if you look more closely, there's something familiar about them! In this celebration of familial love and imaginative play, members of an extended and diverse family join in a journey towards bedtime. Inclusive and playful, this is the perfect bedtime read.
This story is for you
Illustrations and easy-to-read text celebrate a friendship that recognizes what makes one person special and guarantees a closeness that will last through time and across distance.
Mama’s belly
A little girl expresses curiosity and excitement for the coming birth of her baby sister while her parents tenderly reassure her of love's ability to expand with their growing family.
When the cousins came
Even though Lila's cousins do some things differently, Lila loves when they come to visit.
You know what?
It's bedtime, but there's so much Oliver has to tell his mother first--every little thing that he noticed that day, the books he has read, what he sees around him...And, of course, that he loves her.-- Dust jacket flap
Why am I me?
In a poetic, philosophical exchange, two children of different races ask themselves why they are who and what they are, and speculate on how they could be different.
I am human
A child recognizes his own humanity, his capacity for doing harm and being harmed, his ability to feel joy and sadness, and his belief in hope and promise to keep learning.
A unicorn named Sparkle’s first Christmas
As Christmas approaches, Lucy is excited about the tree, cookies, stockings, and especially presents but, despite her urging and example, Sparkle is not interested in buying gifts for Lucy.