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!
38 matching books
Show FiltersFilter Results
-
Africa 38
-
Alaska 1
-
Angola 1
-
Arctic 2
-
Arizona 1
-
Asia 11
-
Brazil 2
-
Cameroon 1
-
Canada 5
-
China 2
-
Colombia 1
-
Cuba 1
-
Egypt 3
-
England 1
-
Eritrea 1
-
Ethiopia 2
-
Europe 9
-
Finland 1
-
Florida 1
-
France 2
-
Georgia 1
-
Germany 3
-
Ghana 1
-
Greece 1
-
India 5
-
Iran 1
-
Israel 2
-
Italy 2
-
Japan 4
-
Kansas 2
-
Kentucky 1
-
Kenya 6
-
Kiribati 1
-
Maine 1
-
Malaysia 1
-
Mali 1
-
Mexico 6
-
Mongolia 1
-
Morocco 3
-
New York 12
-
Nigeria 3
-
Oceania 5
-
Pakistan 1
-
Peru 1
-
Russia 4
-
Scotland 1
-
Senegal 2
-
Somalia 1
-
Spain 1
-
Sudan 2
-
Syria 1
-
Taiwan 1
-
Tanzania 1
-
Thailand 2
-
Tibet 1
-
Zambia 1
-
Zimbabwe 1
-
Fiction 10
-
Non-Fiction 28
-
Boy/Man 16
-
Girl/Woman 22
-
Secondary 17
The girl who buried her dreams in a can
"The true story of a little girl who made an impossible dream achievable"--|cProvided by publisher
My name is Sangoel
As a refugee from Sudan to the United States, Sangoel is frustrated that no one can pronounce his name correctly until he finds a clever way to solve the problem
Never forgotten
In eighteenth-century West Africa, a boy raised by his blacksmith father and the Mother Elements--Wind, Fire, Water, and Earth--is captured and taken to America as a slave.
Seeds of change
"A biography of Kenyan Nobel Peace Prize winner and environmentalist Wangari Maathai, a female scientist who made a stand in the face of opposition to women's rights and her own Greenbelt Movement, an effort to restore Kenya's ecosystem by planting millions of trees"--Provided by publisher
Planting the trees of Kenya
"This is the story of Wangari Maathai, winner of the 2004 Nobel Peace Prize and founder of the Green Belt Movement, Wangari came home from college to find the streams dry, the people malnourished, and the trees gone. How could she alone bring back the trees and restore the gardens and the people?"--Jacket
My name is Celia
A bilingual portrait of the "Queen of Salsa" describes her childhood in Cuba, her musical career, and her move to the United States, and explains how her music brought her native Cuba to the world
My heart will not sit down
In 1931 Cameroon, young Kedi is upset to learn that children in her American teacher's village of New York are going hungry because of the Great Depression, and she asks her mother, neighbors, and even the headman for money to help. Includes historical notes