Audience: Adult

  • Parachute Kids: A Graphic Novel
    Parachute Kids: A Graphic Novel

    Feng-Li can’t wait to discover America with her family! But after an action-packed vacation, her parents deliver shocking news: They are returning to Taiwan and leaving Feng-Li and her older siblings in California on their own.

  • Dragonfruit
    Dragonfruit

    In the old tales, it is written that the egg of a seadragon, dragonfruit, holds within it the power to undo a person’s greatest sorrow. Every wish demands a price in this Pacific Islander tale.

  • Throwback
    Throwback

    Sam travels back in time to the 1990s where she must figure out how to fix things with her Korean American mother. “Throwback asks big questions about what exactly one inherits and loses in the immigrant experience.”

  • Ruth Asawa: An Artist Takes Shape
    Ruth Asawa: An Artist Takes Shape

    Known for her innovative wire sculptures; Japanese American artist Ruth Asawa was a teenager in Southern California when Japan bombed Pearl Harbor. Her father was incarcerated, and the rest of her family were sent to a detention center in California, and later to an internment camp in Arkansas. A few years later she was accepted…

  • Home Is Not a Country
    Home Is Not a Country

    From the acclaimed poet featured on Forbes Africa’s “30 Under 30” list, this powerful novel-in-verse captures one girl, caught between cultures, on an unexpected journey to face the ephemeral girl she might have been. Woven through with moments of lyrical beauty, this is a tender meditation on family, belonging, and home. Nima wishes she were…

  • The Turtle of Michigan
    The Turtle of Michigan

    The stand-alone companion to National Book Award Finalist and beloved poet Naomi Shihab Nye’s The Turtle of Oman. The Turtle of Michigan is a deft and accessible novel that follows a young boy named Aref as he travels from Muscat, Oman, to Ann Arbor, Michigan, and adjusts to a new life and a new school…

  • How the Sphinx Got to the Museum
    How the Sphinx Got to the Museum

    Acclaimed author and illustrator, Jessie Hartland, beautifully presents this informative and fascinating history of the Hatshepsut sphinx: from its carving in ancient Egypt to its arrival in the hallowed halls of New York City’s Metropolitan Museum of Art. This is essential reading for junior Egyptologists!

  • The Night Before Eid: A Muslim Family Story
    The Night Before Eid: A Muslim Family Story

    A CCBC Children’s Choice Best Book of the Year! Celebrate the end of Ramadan with this luminous Muslim family story about faith, history, and delicious foods. On the night before Eid, it’s finally time to make special sweet treats: Teita’s famous ka’ak. Zain eagerly unpacks the ingredients from his grandmother’s bulky suitcase: ghee from Khalo…

  • Messy Roots: A Graphic Memoir of a Wuhanese American
    Messy Roots: A Graphic Memoir of a Wuhanese American

    “Messy Roots is a laugh-out-loud, heartfelt, and deeply engaging story of their journey to find themself–as an American, as the daughter of Chinese immigrants, as a queer person, and as a Wuhanese American in the middle of a pandemic.”—Malaka Gharib, author of I Was Their American Dream. After spending her early years in Wuhan, China,…

  • We Are Here: 30 Inspiring Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders Who Have Shaped the United States
    We Are Here: 30 Inspiring Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders Who Have Shaped the United States

    A stunning anthology licensed in partnership with the Smithsonian Asian Pacific American Center, We Are Here celebrates 30 of the most inspiring Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders in U.S. history. There are more than 23 million people of Asian and Pacific Islander descent living in the United States. Their stories span across generations, as well…

  • She Sang for India: How M.S. Subbulakshmi Used Her Voice for Change
    She Sang for India: How M.S. Subbulakshmi Used Her Voice for Change

    A picture book biography about M.S. Subbulakshmi, a powerful Indian singer who advocated for justice and peace through song. Before M.S. Subbulakshmi was a famous Carnatic singer and the first Indian woman to perform at the United Nations, she was a young girl with a prodigious voice. But Subbulakshmi was not free to sing everywhere.…

  • It’s Holi!
    It’s Holi!

    Wake up, it’s Holi! Sameer and his family are preparing to celebrate Holi and the beginning of spring! Scrumptious sweet and savory treats fill platters, and a rainbow of powdered colors is set out. Everyone is ready for the bright and messy festivities ahead. But young Sameer gets nervous seeing his sisters start throwing colors…