30 books
Amy brings creativity and family collaboration to a Lunar New Year dragon costume project.
Bold colors and simple shapes create a graphic first-concepts book with strong visual rhythm for toddlers.
Repeating language, bright collage, and predictable rhythm make this one of the most recognizable early read-alouds.
Alphabet letters race up a coconut tree in one of the most durable, rhythmic alphabet read-alouds ever made.
A boy and his grandfather bridge language and generational distance through drawing and shared creativity.
Color, motion, and train parts race across the page in a classic concept book that still feels clean and energetic.
A lyrical, fantastical story about a child whose identity resists narrow categories and is nurtured by family love.
Harold draws his own world one line at a time, making this a foundational book about imagination and visual thinking.
Drawing instruction and close looking become a playful invitation to notice the individuality, structure, and life of trees.
Even when adults disapprove, Iggy cannot stop building bold, structurally surprising things.
A visually graceful story of self-expression, costume, and unconditional support as a child claims a mermaid identity.
A neighborhood begins to change when a child, an artist, and a burst of color invite everyone into a mural-making project.
An innkeeper's daughter learns the high wire from a retired performer and finds the courage to cross it herself.
A young girl imagines all the places she can go while wrapped in her mother?s khimar.
A young girl's real-life response to Michelle Obama's portrait opens into a story about art, possibility, and being seen.
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.
Rosie builds marvelous inventions in secret until a beloved aunt shows her that failure belongs inside engineering.
A Black girl grapples with colorism and self-worth in a visually rich story about learning to love her dark skin.
On a Harlem rooftop, a girl imagines herself flying over the city and claiming the world she deserves.
An immigrant story about language, school, and an Arab girl who turns exclusion into shared creativity.
A mixed-up monster sorts his feelings one color at a time in a tactile introduction to emotional vocabulary.
A box of crayons stages a hilarious labor dispute, each color tired of being used the wrong way.
A girl retools The Little Red Hen into a building project that shows what initiative and making can do.