Learn the difference between a house and a home in A Home Again, by Colleen Rowan Kosinski and Valeria Docampo.
Browsing: Celebrating Diversity
It’s Perfectly Normal, by Robie H. Harris and Michael Emberley, has now been updated with new information and art.
Code Breaker, Spy Hunter: How Elizebeth Friedman Changed the Course of Two World Wars is the story of the woman who furthered the field of cryptology.
The Stuff Between The Stars: How Vera Rubin Discovered Most of the Universe tells the discovery of dark matter.
Ruth Behar’s Letters From Cuba follows a young Jewish girl who trades life in Poland for life in Cuba on the eve of World War II.
A teen struggles to move on after her mom’s deportation in Raquel Vasquez Gilliand’s Sia Martinez and the Moonlit Beginning of Everything.
Two girls bond over South Asian cooking in Saadia Faruqi and Laura Shovan’s excellent A Place at the Table.
March is Women’s History Month. To help you celebrate, here are some recently released books that celebrate women’s accomplishments.
Like many of her other books, the idea for How I Became a Spy was born out of one of Deborah Hopkinson’s earlier projects.
There’s been much talk about building a wall to keep “the bad hombres” out of the U.S. The Border, by Steve Schafer, questions who those bad hombres are.