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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530 matching books
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Cross Group 89
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Folklore 23
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Incidental 530
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Activism 18
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Adoption 3
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Disability 103
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LGBTQIAP2S 25
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STEM 33
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Fiction 530
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Yanomami 1
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Boy/Man 154
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Girl/Woman 178
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Intersex 1
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Non-Binary 11
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Unspecified 35
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Background 32
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Dominant Main 148
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Joint Main 21
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Secondary 174
Little seeds
Simple rhyming text follows a child who plants flower seeds in a garden and loves to watch them grow.
Don’t let Auntie Mabel bless the table
An extended family gathers for Sunday dinner, but the food grows cold as Auntie Mabel's prayer encompasses everything and everyone in sight
Compost stew
A rhyming text explains from A to Z, which common items around the house can be turned into the dark, crumbly stuff we call "compost stew". The collage illustrations are made from some of those items to help make the point. There's a note at the end of the text listing things that are not suitable for adding to the compost bin
Riding to Washington
"A young white girl rides the bus with her father to the March on Washington in 1963--at which Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., would give his "I Have a Dream" speech. She comes to see that Dr. King's dream belongs not just to Blacks but to all Americans"--Provided by publisher
Dad, Jackie, and me
In Brooklyn, New York, in 1947, a boy learns about discrimination and tolerance as he and his deaf father share their enthusiasm over baseball and the Dodgers' first baseman, Jackie Robinson
And then comes Christmas
A story that celebrates the signs of the approaching season--from icicles clinging to roofs and houses strung with colorful lights to visiting Santa and hunting for the perfect tree
Recycling is fun
Simple rhyming text follows children as they recycle bottles and cans and donate old clothes to charity.
The final game
Danny and his friends Anita and little Petou join a hockey team called the Wolves. Danny, who describes himself as having "a crippled leg and foot so he couldn't wear skates, " plays goalie and observes that Travis, the team hotshot, never passes the puck to Anita or Petou in practice or in games. Danny's brother Bob, star player for the Toronto Maple Leafs, advises the Wolves to play as a team. In the final minutes of the big game, Travis takes the hometown hero's advice to heart, passing to Petou for the final goal.
Uno dos tres: My First Spanish Rhymes
A collection of rhymes, poems, and songs from all over the Spanish-speaking world.
My Mommy is a Hero
"Like daddies, military mommies work at lots of different jobs in all kinds of places. This book pays loving tribute to a child’s confidence that 'My Mommy is a Hero!' through lovely rhyme and bright artwork." -- publisher