Boy/man/male

An old couple's search for one cat escalates into a famously strange and memorable parade of too many cats to count.
Harold draws his own world one line at a time, making this a foundational book about imagination and visual thinking.
George's curiosity carries him into trouble and delight in a classic that still works for children who love mischief and cause-and-effect.
A peddler's nap under a tree leads to a perfectly repeatable showdown with a troop of mischievous monkeys.
A little bunny imagines running farther and farther away while his mother imagines every loving way she would still find him.
Creatures of the rainforest and an Indigenous child plead with a logger to spare a towering kapok tree and the life around it.
Children and trees are compared through a lyrical meditation on growth, rootedness, change, and interdependence.
A very old rock tells younger natural neighbors what he has witnessed across ages of geologic time.
Bright diagrams and simple explanations show how plants become food and how sunlight, water, and growth connect to our plates.
Luis Agassiz Fuertes and scientists of the deep help reveal a giant squid in a story that combines art, curiosity, and ocean research.