Identity

Children and trees are compared through a lyrical meditation on growth, rootedness, change, and interdependence.
A small dinosaur with a wonderful picnic plan must learn how to soothe anxious thoughts before they spoil the day.
Llewellyn stores up feelings in jars until they cannot be contained, in a gentle story about naming and sharing emotion.
A typographic affirmation book names bravery, curiosity, creativity, and kindness as qualities children can keep growing into.
A cookie who does not fit the usual idea of smartness discovers her own kind of intelligence and confidence.
A seed with a bad reputation tells the story of how hurt, defensiveness, and change can all fit inside one life.
A stressed-out egg discovers that trying to hold everything together alone is not the same as being okay.
An alphabet board book introduces Black history through names, ideas, movements, and moments worth returning to as children grow.
A counting book introduces children to neighborhoods shaped by inclusion, mutual aid, and everyday social justice.
Rhyming text introduces anti-racist ideas through bright art and direct language for shared reading with very young children.