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!
440 matching books
Show FiltersFilter Results
-
Any Child 135
-
Beautiful Life 215
-
Biography 10
-
Cross Group 56
-
Folklore 45
-
Bolivian 1
-
Brazilian 13
-
Chilean 2
-
Chinese 3
-
Cuban 10
-
Dominican 10
-
Egyptian 1
-
German 3
-
Ghanaian 1
-
Guatemalan 10
-
Guinean 1
-
Haitian 1
-
Honduran 1
-
Indian 1
-
Irish 1
-
Israeli 1
-
Jamaican 1
-
Japanese 2
-
Korean 3
-
Mexican 113
-
Multiethnic 11
-
Peruvian 9
-
Puerto Rican 25
-
Russian 1
-
Salvadoran 10
-
Scottish 2
-
Somali 1
-
Spanish 2
-
Sudanese 1
-
Unspecified 242
-
Africa 2
-
Arctic 1
-
Arizona 2
-
Asia 1
-
Bolivia 1
-
Brazil 10
-
California 22
-
Caribbean 25
-
Chile 2
-
Colombia 6
-
Colorado 1
-
Cuba 7
-
Ecuador 3
-
Europe 1
-
Florida 2
-
Ghana 1
-
Haiti 2
-
Honduras 2
-
Illinois 4
-
Iowa 2
-
Ireland 1
-
Israel 1
-
Japan 1
-
Mexico 60
-
Michigan 1
-
Nevada 1
-
New York 26
-
Northern America 151
-
Ohio 2
-
Peru 7
-
Puerto Rico 16
-
Reunion 1
-
Spain 1
-
Texas 11
-
Unspecified 205
-
Activism 12
-
Adoption 2
-
Bi/multilingual 333
-
Disability 21
-
STEM 19
-
Fiction 440
-
Boy/Man 302
-
Girl/Woman 350
-
Unspecified 22
-
Background 43
-
Dominant Main 311
-
Joint Main 96
-
Secondary 297
What Can You Do with a Rebozo?
"In a playful celebration of a vibrant culture, a young girl and her family show all the things they do in their daily lives with a rebozo, a traditional Mexican woven shawl. Lively prose and rich illustrations honor a warm and colorful cultural icon. You can do almost anything with a rebozo--and a little imagination!" -- publisher
The triple banana split boy / El nino goloso
Young Enrique, who loves to eat desserts, learns how to control--and appreciate--his sweet tooth, with the help of his mother and El Coco, a fearsome creature with a huge mouth and sticky hair
The shark that taught me English
A Spanish-speaking immigrant girl goes to elementary school and does not know English. Her teacher helps her to learn English by using a shark. By learning about the shark, the young girl begins to learn English
The runaway piggy / El cochinito fugitivo
A Mexican piggy cookie escapes from the bakery before it can be eaten and eludes an ever-growing line of people pursuing it. Includes recipe for piggy cookies
The king of things / El rey de las cosas
As he plays with lottery cards and looks at the pictures, three-year-old Lalo thinks that he owns the world, including the sun, a big train, and a frog.
The cazuela that the farm maiden stirred
A cumulative tale of a farm maiden who, aided by a group of animals, prepares "Arroz con leche," or rice pudding. Includes recipe and glossary of the Spanish words that are woven throughout the text
Little chanclas
Lily Lujan is known as Little Chanclas because she wears her chanclas, or flip flops, wherever she goes, especially to parties, so when the chanclas come apart while she is dancing at a family barbecue and Chewcho the bulldog eats one, Lily is inconsolable until Granny Lola arrives with a solution
Icy watermelon / Sandía fría
When three generations of a family gather to eat watermelon, the grandparents reminisce about how the sweet fruit brought them together.
I see the sun in Mexico
A young boy describes his typical day in Mexico, having breakfast, going to the market, and then paying a visit to the sea shore
Growing up with tamales / Los tamales de Ana
Six-year-old Ana looks forward to growing older and being allowed more responsibility in making the tamales for the family's Christmas celebrations