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!
5013 matching books
Show FiltersFilter Results
-
Any Child 1688
-
Beautiful Life 1291
-
Biography 680
-
Cross Group 806
-
Folklore 353
-
Incidental 722
-
Informational 500
-
Afghan 17
-
Algerian 1
-
Angolan 1
-
Antiguan 1
-
Assyrian 1
-
Australian 11
-
Austrian 1
-
Balinese 1
-
Basotho 1
-
Belizean 1
-
Bengali 5
-
Berber 1
-
Bolivian 2
-
Brazilian 28
-
British 22
-
Burmese 2
-
Canadian 24
-
Caribbean 21
-
Chadian 1
-
Chilean 5
-
Chinese 195
-
Creole 2
-
Cuban 17
-
Czech 1
-
Dominican 16
-
Dutch 2
-
Egyptian 27
-
Emirati 3
-
Eritrean 2
-
Ethiopian 91
-
French 7
-
Gambian 2
-
German 19
-
Ghanaian 15
-
Greek 3
-
Guatemalan 13
-
Guinean 1
-
Guyanese 3
-
Haitian 17
-
Hmong 6
-
Honduran 2
-
Igbo 4
-
Indian 156
-
Iranian 11
-
Iraqi 12
-
Irish 8
-
Israeli 7
-
Italian 4
-
Ivorian 1
-
Jamaican 21
-
Japanese 124
-
Kenyan 35
-
Kikuyu 1
-
Korean 43
-
Kurdish 1
-
Kuwaiti 2
-
Laotian 2
-
Latvian 1
-
Lebanese 3
-
Maasai 1
-
Malagasy 1
-
Malawian 3
-
Malay 3
-
Malian 4
-
Mexican 166
-
Mongol 1
-
Moroccan 10
-
Multiethnic 154
-
Ndebele 1
-
Nepalese 10
-
Nigerian 18
-
Nigerien 3
-
Pakistani 21
-
Persian 8
-
Peruvian 11
-
Polish 6
-
Puerto Rican 37
-
Punjabi 1
-
Roman 2
-
Romani 2
-
Romanian 1
-
Russian 14
-
Salvadoran 12
-
Scottish 7
-
Slovak 1
-
Somali 8
-
South Asian 208
-
Spanish 13
-
Sudanese 6
-
Swede 2
-
Syrian 11
-
Tanzanian 15
-
Thai 11
-
Tibetan 8
-
Tunisian 1
-
Turkish 6
-
Ugandan 7
-
Unspecified 2628
-
Uyghur 1
-
Vietnamese 22
-
Xhosa 3
-
Yemeni 1
-
Yoruba 1
-
Zambian 1
-
Afghanistan 17
-
Africa 268
-
Alabama 61
-
Alaska 20
-
Algeria 1
-
Angola 2
-
Antigua 1
-
Arctic 95
-
Arizona 19
-
Arkansas 11
-
Around the World 251
-
Asia 449
-
Australia 27
-
Bahamas 1
-
Bali 2
-
Barbados 3
-
Belize 1
-
Bengal 1
-
Benin 1
-
Bhutan 3
-
Bolivia 1
-
Brazil 29
-
Burundi 1
-
California 139
-
Cambodia 8
-
Cameroon 5
-
Canada 165
-
Caribbean 86
-
Chad 1
-
Chile 5
-
China 142
-
Colombia 10
-
Colorado 3
-
Comoros 1
-
Congo 1
-
Cuba 13
-
Delaware 1
-
Dominica 1
-
Eastern Africa 167
-
Eastern Asia 244
-
Ecuador 5
-
Egypt 31
-
England 19
-
Eritrea 3
-
Ethiopia 94
-
Europe 77
-
Finland 2
-
Florida 20
-
France 28
-
Gabon 1
-
Gambia 1
-
Georgia 32
-
Germany 18
-
Ghana 13
-
Greece 4
-
Grenada 1
-
Guatemala 11
-
Guinea 2
-
Guyana 1
-
Haiti 16
-
Hawaii 30
-
Honduras 2
-
Idaho 2
-
Illinois 41
-
Imaginary 171
-
India 122
-
Indiana 4
-
Indonesia 13
-
Iowa 4
-
Iran 13
-
Iraq 14
-
Ireland 2
-
Israel 15
-
Italy 10
-
Jamaica 6
-
Japan 86
-
Jordan 2
-
Kansas 15
-
Kentucky 18
-
Kenya 41
-
Kiribati 1
-
Kuwait 1
-
Laos 4
-
Lebanon 3
-
Libya 1
-
Louisiana 37
-
Maine 11
-
Malawi 3
-
Malaysia 5
-
Maldives 1
-
Mali 6
-
Maryland 26
-
Mayotte 1
-
Mexico 112
-
Michigan 22
-
Minnesota 18
-
Mississippi 17
-
Missouri 18
-
Mongolia 5
-
Montana 5
-
Morocco 13
-
Nebraska 2
-
Nepal 10
-
Nevada 5
-
New Jersey 21
-
New Mexico 17
-
New York 237
-
Niger 1
-
Nigeria 14
-
Northern America 1423
-
Norway 4
-
Nunavut 39
-
Oceania 57
-
Ohio 15
-
Oklahoma 23
-
Oregon 4
-
Outerspace 45
-
Pakistan 18
-
Panama 1
-
Paraguay 1
-
Pennsylvania 33
-
Peru 13
-
Philippines 14
-
Poland 4
-
Polynesia 30
-
Portugal 3
-
Puerto Rico 23
-
Reunion 2
-
Romania 1
-
Russia 7
-
Ryuku 1
-
Scotland 2
-
Senegal 4
-
Somalia 7
-
South Africa 35
-
Southern Asia 185
-
Spain 11
-
Sudan 3
-
Sweden 1
-
Syria 8
-
Taiwan 5
-
Tanzania 2
-
Tennessee 31
-
Texas 43
-
Thailand 18
-
Tibet 6
-
Tunisia 1
-
Uganda 7
-
Unspecified 2191
-
Utah 2
-
Vietnam 14
-
Virginia 34
-
Western Asia 86
-
Yemen 1
-
Zambia 2
-
Zimbabwe 2
-
Activism 423
-
Adoption 46
-
Bi/multilingual 1105
-
Disability 427
-
Diverse Family 492
-
LGBTQIAP2S 118
-
STEM 368
-
Fiction 3744
-
Non-Fiction 1180
-
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 8
-
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 4
-
Tewa 1
-
Tlicho 1
-
Tlingit 4
-
Tolowa 1
-
Triqui 1
-
Tuniit 1
-
Tzeltal 1
-
Unspecified 37
-
Wabanaki 12
-
Waycobah 1
-
Yanomami 1
-
Yup'ik 3
-
Yurok 1
-
Zapotec 1
-
Boy/Man 2850
-
Girl/Woman 3122
-
Intersex 3
-
Māhū 1
-
Non-Binary 28
-
Transgender 23
-
Unspecified 504
-
Background 429
-
Dominant Main 2949
-
Joint Main 950
-
Secondary 2638
What’s up, Bear?
Sophie and her best friend Bear are off to explore New York City through nearly twenty pairs of opposites.
Shanghai messenger
"You are my messenger. Look everything. Remember." Grandma Nai Nai tells eleven-year-old Xiao Mei as the girl heads off to Shanghai, China, to visit their extended family. Xiao Mei is both excited and apprehensive. She will meet many new relatives, but will they accept her, a girl from America who is only half Chinese? Xiao Mei is eagerly embraced by her aunties, uncles and cousins and quickly immersed in the sights, smells and hubbub of daily living in Shanghai. At first battling homesickness, Xiao Mei soon ventures on her own, discovering the excitement of a different way of life and a new appreciation of her Chinese heritage. When it is finally time to leave, Xiao Mei must gather up her memories and bring "a little bit of China" back home. A lyrical story of adventure, self-discovery, and the strong bonds that tie families together. ~Publisher
The new small person
Elmore Green likes being an only child, so when his parents bring a new small person, his baby brother, into the house he is not pleased and does his best to keep the new small person out of his life
Who’s in my family?
Join Nellie and Gus and their family — plus all manner of other families — for a day at the zoo, where they see animal families galore! To top off their day, Nellie and Gus invite friends and relatives for a fun dinner at home. Accessible, humorous, and full of charming illustrations depicting families of many configurations (including -- same-sex parents, single parents, foster parents, separated/divorced parents, kids that are born or adopted into families), this engaging story interweaves conversations between the siblings and a matter-of-fact text, making it clear to every child that whoever makes up your family, it is perfectly normal — and totally wonderful.
Growing up Pedro
Before Pedro Martínez pitched the Red Sox to a World Series championship, before he was named to the All-Star team eight times, before he won the Cy Young Award three times, he was a kid from a place called Manoguayabo in the Dominican Republic. Pedro loved baseball more than anything, and his older brother Ramón was the best pitcher he'd ever seen. He dreamed of the day he and his brother could play together in the major leagues. This is the story of how that dream came true--Dust jacket
My big brother
When his big brother leaves to become a soldier, a boy does what he can to take his place in the family
The cricket warrior
In order to save his family, a Chinese boy turns into a fighting cricket and becomes the emperor's champion
Beatrice’s goat
A young girl's dream of attending school in her small Ugandan village is fulfilled after her family is given an income-producing goat. Based on a true story about the work of Project Heifer. More than anything, Beatrice longs to be a schoolgirl. But in her small African village, only children who can afford uniforms and books can go to school. Beatrice knows that with six children to care for, her family is much too poor. But then Beatrice receives a wonderful gift from some people far away--a goat! Fat and sleek as a ripe mango, Mugisa (which means "luck") gives milk that Beatrice can sell. With Mugisa's help, it looks as if Beatrice's dream may come true after all. Page McBrier and Lori Lohstoeter beautifully recount this true story about how one child, given the right tools, is able to lift her family out of poverty. Thanks to Heifer Project International--a charitable organization that donates livestock to poor communities around the world-- other families like Beatrice's will also have a chance to change their lives
My Uncle Martin’s words for America
Angela Farris Watkins, the niece of Martin Luther King Jr., recounts her uncle's work to promote racial equality and introduces key events during the civil rights era.
Fatuma’s new cloth
In East Africa, a young girl learns that one cannot always judge by appearances as she and her mother visit a market in search of kanga cloth and meet merchants who all claim they have the secret to good chai (tea)