356 books
This biography of Jean-Michel Basquiat connects Black creativity, art-making, and city energy from childhood on.
A young girl in Guatemala turns discarded plastic into weaving material so she can make art like the women in her family.
A girl explores kinship, adornment, and cultural pride in a story that ties beauty and belonging to community knowledge.
When Ravi's anger turns him into a tiger, he has to learn what feeling mad is trying to tell him and how repair can happen afterward.
Young Ron McNair challenges segregated library rules in a story of courage, books, and civil rights.
Rosie builds marvelous inventions in secret until a beloved aunt shows her that failure belongs inside engineering.
Rosie strolls calmly across the farm while chaos trails right behind her in a nearly wordless classic of comic timing.
Shapes come alive through foods, objects, and scenes rooted in Latino culture and everyday family life.
Ruby's small worry grows bigger and bigger until she learns what happens when worries are named and shared.
A Muslim girl decides whether to keep hiding her prayer practice at school or share who she really is.
A mother and daughter face a string of small disappointments and rebuild their special day with love and flexibility.
A girl sees hunger, stigma, and community care more clearly during a weekly pantry visit with her mother.
Art and text together introduce Arturo Schomburg and his lifelong work collecting Black history the world tried to erase.
The school building itself narrates a first day full of nerves, confusion, and growing confidence.
A monarch butterfly guides children northward in a bilingual story about migration, care, and connection across borders.
This picture-book biography recounts how Sylvia Mendez and her family helped end school segregation in California.
In this retelling rooted in Ghana, seven brothers must find a way to turn inheritance into something shared and useful.
Eugenie Clark's fascination with sharks becomes a picture-book invitation to scientific curiosity and marine research.
A celebration of faces, recognition, and affection invites children to see smiling eyes as a source of beauty, connection, and pride.
During urban unrest, neighbors divided by prejudice discover shared fear, loss, and responsibility.
When a local problem needs fixing, Sofia learns how civic persistence can move grown-ups to action.
Luis Agassiz Fuertes and scientists of the deep help reveal a giant squid in a story that combines art, curiosity, and ocean research.
Creation itself seems to lean in and rejoice on the night of Jesus's birth.
The appearance of a bird opens into a reflective story about observation, neighborhood life, and the meaning people make around the natural world.