Fiction

A family gathers across seven nights of Kwanzaa, centering ritual, memory, and Black cultural continuity.

An inventor's big idea meets repeated failure until frustration becomes part of the making process.

This affirming address to Black children holds beauty, vulnerability, fear, and love in the same breath.

One spilled juice accident opens a bigger question for a girl trying to understand what kindness really means.

A girl sees the many ways the women in her family wear hijab and express beauty, work, and personality.

Humpty Dumpty learns how to live after a fall that leaves him frightened of heights and change.

Colors introduce parts of Muslim family and religious life through rich imagery and a simple conceptual frame.

A disabled boy grows tired of invasive questions and finds a better way to tell peers what matters.

Poetic text and motion-filled art celebrate girls and women who own the basketball court.

This affirmation-rich picture book invites children to value themselves and still make room for one another.