Picture Books
Synopsis:
Charlotte has outgrown her moccasins! Still, there's nothing a trip to Grandma's can't fix in this heartwarming intergenerational story.
A sweet, celebratory picture book about family and culture by two debut Métis creators centered around Indigenous peoples' tradition of making moccasins, perfect for 3-7-year-olds.
Charlotte has outgrown her moccasins, so she and her Mom head to Grandma's for new ones. Grandma teaches Charlotte how to make her new mocs step-by-step, and she learns a valuable skill from her beloved elder in this heartwarming multigenerational story.
A contemporary celebration of Native culture, tradition, and family. A highly-relatable story for Indigenous kids and any kid that has ever outgrown their favorite thing to wear.
Back matter includes details about moccasins then and now, some additional facts about them, and information about how they have been made over time.
Educator Information
Recommended for ages 3 to 7.
Additional Information
32 pages | 9.00" x 11.31" | Hardcover
Synopsis:
Learn about the rhythms of the seasons with Joshua in this captivating read-aloud story for ages 5 to 8.
Join Joshua as his father teaches him about traditional food harvesting.
Joshua loves being on the land. When the weather is warm, Joshua and his dad gather mint from the shores of Animbiigoo Zaagi’igan Anishinaabek (Lake Nipigon First Nation) in northeastern Ontario. But when will that be? It’s not when the leaves are changing colour. It’s not when the snow falls from the sky. It’s not when the flowers are budding. When is it time to gather mint from the land?
In the back of the book, find a glossary and pronunciation guide for the Swampy Cree and Anishinaabemowin words featured throughout the story.
Reviews
"Tyna Legault Taylor delivers a magical story of the seasons through Joshua’s sweet anticipation as he learns how to know when it is time to harvest katakipanik / gaaminomaagobagak / mint from the land. In this beautifully illustrated book, Joshua gains important land-based traditional knowledges from his father about harvesting, medicines, and Indigenous food sovereignty and learns key words in Northern Swampy Cree and Anishinaabemowin as he discovers his relationships to land. With the inclusion of a recipe for Mint From the Land Iced Tea and a glossary, this book will engage readers of all ages, but will be especially treasured by children who see themselves in Joshua’s curious and adventurous spirit!" — Barbara Parker, Associate Professor, Lakehead University
“Swampy Cree…and Anishinaabemowin words are interwoven seamlessly into the simply stated sentences. Dao’s vibrant illustrations radiate warmth and connection. Sharing land-based Indigenous knowledge, this is an informative picture-book-series opener.”—Booklist
“A warm and colourful tale that brings traditional teachings to life. This is a story from the home and the heart that the whole family will enjoy.”—Don Kelly, Gemini Award–nominated host of APTN's Fish Out of Water and Crazy Like a Lynx
“The lived experience of Joshua and his family...is a testament to the sacred connection between Indigenous people and the land. A great tool for all children to learn more about Indigenous people and Indigenous languages.”—Phil Fontaine, former National Chief of the Assembly of First Nations
Educator & Series Information
Recommended for ages 5 to 8.
Includes some Swampy Cree (n-dialect) words in brown and Anishinaabemowin words in green, but this is not a dual-language book.
The backmatter includes a Swampy Cree/Anishinaabemowin Glossary and a recipe for Mint From the Land Iced Tea.
Big Ideas: Land-Based and Place-Based Learning, Traditional Foods, Traditional Clothing, Traditional Medicine, STEM: Seasonal Cycles, STEM: Plants.
This book is part of the Joshua Learns from the Land series.
Additional Information
36 pages | 9.00" x 9.00" | Hardcover
Synopsis:
An action-packed adventure featuring a stunt-penguin stuffed animal, this picture book by award-winning author Jesse Wente will appeal to movie fans young and old.
It's bird! It's a plane!
It's DANGER EAGLE!
Danger Eagle is brave.
Danger Eagle is bold.
Danger Eagle is . . . a penguin?
No matter! Danger Eagle is up for any challenge, and there's nothing that one-of-a-kind this stunt-stuffie can't do… Or is there?
Read on to find out in this action-packed origin story!
Reviews
"Increasingly funny text and art ensue, striking a clever balance between fantasy and reality; the images feel like stills from an animated cartoon." —Kirkus Reviews
Educator Information
Recommended for ages 5 to 9.
Additional Information
48 pages | 10.40" x 8.25" | Hardcover
Synopsis:
At Elk Falls on Vancouver Island, the children gather around the campfire, ready for one of Nana Kelly’s stories.
She tells them of a time, long ago, when dragons were born from the love of forest creatures and the flames from the Great Spirit’s fire. As the wood burned low, that love and warmth filled the logs—and the Great Spirit transformed them into glowing dragon hearts and heads. Lifted by the fire, the heads floated toward the falls, where only the rushing water could give them bodies and give them life.
But when the ancient forests were cut down, only one dragon remained. Lonely and full of sorrow, it wept—until one night, the dragon’s tear met a glowing ember . . .
Momo, carrying her heart in her mouth, must find her way to the falls before her small body fades. With help from the Princess of Peace and a river full of salmon, Momo races against time to complete her transformation into a dragon.
A story as old as the forests and the falls, Dragon’s Tears shows how love, courage, and the kindness of others can bring something beautiful back to life.
Educator Information
Recommended for ages 11 and under.
Additional Information
28 pages | 8.50" x 11.00" | Paperback
Synopsis:
Let Dragonfly lead you on a journey of inspiration!
Following your winged guide, visit the places and things that can help you find strength in the present and imagine your amazing future. Dream alongside everything from a giant construction site and a sewing machine to the river and a blanket of moss. After your travels, Dragonfly asks: What do you like to dream about? With its mixed setting in rural and urban environments and exploration of both the natural and modern world, Dreaming Alongside gives readers permission to daydream and think of what magic their lives have the potential to hold.
Educator Information
Recommended for ages 3 to 5.
This book is available in English and Plains Cree: Dreaming Alongside / ê-pawâtamahk.
Reading Levels:
Fountas & Pinnell Text Level Gradient: L
Lexile measure: 900L
Guided Reading Level: L
Additional Information
32 pages | 9.00" x 9.00" | Hardcover
Synopsis:
Let Dragonfly lead you on a journey of inspiration!
Following your winged guide, visit the places and things that can help you find strength in the present and imagine your amazing future. Dream alongside everything from a giant construction site and a sewing machine to the river and a blanket of moss. After your travels, Dragonfly asks: What do you like to dream about? With its mixed setting in rural and urban environments and exploration of both the natural and modern world, Dreaming Alongside gives readers permission to daydream and think of what magic their lives have the potential to hold.
Educator Information
Recommended for ages 3 to 5.
This bilingual book includes full text in both English and Plains Cree.
Translated into Plains Cree by Dorothy Thunder.
This book is available in English only: Dreaming Alongside.
Additional Information
32 pages | 9.00" x 9.00" | Hardcover
Synopsis:
A joyful and vibrant celebration of what makes aunties so special, from Indigenous author and illustrator team Laurel Goodluck and Steph Littlebird inviting all kids to connect with the fierce aunties in their lives.
Who do you go to for advice and support? Or when you want an adventure and a little extra courage? Or when you need to find that warrior spirit inside you? Fierce aunties!
Aunties come in different shapes, sizes, and ages. They all have different laughs, skills, and stories. They might be your parents’ sisters, your older cousins, or even family friends. But there’s something they all have in common: They’re fierce, they love you, and they’ll help make everything better.
Educator Information
Recommended for ages 4 to 8.
Additional Information
40 pages | 9.00" x 11.00" | Hardcover
Synopsis:
Written by the award-winning, bestselling author of Jingle Dancer, Cynthia Leitich Smith (Muscogee), and filled with tender illustrations by Kate Gardiner (Nipmuck), this unforgettable, warmhearted picture book is for family and the friends who become family.
Piper feels grateful for visits with her relatives, especially for the time spent with her cousins in Cherokee Nation and Muscogee Nation during summer vacations, fishing on misty mornings and playing on firefly-filled evenings. Piper’s family lives a road trip away in Kansas City. So when a neighbor named Sumi moves in next door, Piper is excited to share her stories and seasons with a new friend.
The two are inseparable—until Piper’s family moves to another city. Their bond overcomes distance, and with time, Piper dreams up a plan to reunite with the people she loves most of all.
Reviews
"A familial narrative filled with longing, love, and the blessing of found sisterhood."— Publishers Weekly (starred review)
"A glowing tribute to family across distance and lineage." — Kirkus Reviews
"Reflections on family, found family, and how bonds are forged and kept are reassuringly wholesome...Quietly sweet and authentic." — Bulletin of the Center for Children’s Books
Educator Information
Recommended for ages 4 to 8.
Additional Information
40 pages | 8.50" x 11.00" | Hardcover
Synopsis:
A baby girl is welcomed to the breathing world by generations of her family and set on the magnificent journey of becoming. As she grows, she is reminded of her connections to the natural world; to her family, her ancestors, her neighbors; to the source of all magic and sorrow—and of her responsibility to uphold and honor those connections.
With US Poet Laureate Joy Harjo’s transcendent verse and Pura Belpré Award winner Adriana Garcia’s monumental illustrations, For a Girl Becoming acts as a blessing and a harbinger for a young girl’s life—and reminds those of us who still stand at the door of becoming that it is our relationships with nature and with each other that carry us through it.
Educator Information
Recommended for ages 4 to 8.
Additional Information
40 pages | 9.00" x 12.00" | Hardcover
Synopsis:
Nanuraq and Jeela can’t wait to visit their grandmother at her cabin!
The cabin is cozy with the smell of bannock and a qulliq glowing. Grandma explains how she made the qulliq herself! Before long, the kids are pointing out other neat things around the cabin, like wooden dolls, bone toys, and pincushions. The kids learn that Grandma has made all of these items out of found objects.
Through exploring the cabin with their grandmother, the kids learn about the importance of being creative and not being wasteful.
Educator Information
Recommended for ages 6 to 8.
Includes some Inuktitut words and phrases.
Additional Information
32 pages | 8.00" x 9.00" | Paperback
Synopsis:
Grandmother Moon is lonely in the night sky. When she stops in her journey to hear Brother Mountain's stories, she also stops the sun from rising, the animals from sleeping, and more! This causes the Creator to intervene, but how can Grandmother Moon's loneliness be solved while ensuring the sky moves from night to day?
Educator Information
Recommended for grades 3 and under.
Additional Information
36 Pages | 8.25" x 8.25" | Hardcover
Synopsis:
"Nohhum, doesn't it look like the moon is following us?"
During her weekly car ride with her grandmother from the city to the reservation, a young Native girl ponders the moon that seems to follow them. Each week, she looks forward to listening to her grandmother's warm, soothing voice as she sings and tells stories. Tonight, her grandmother teaches her about Grandmother Moon, her significance, and why we honor her.
In her debut picture book, Wunneanatsu Lamb-Cason (Schaghticoke/HoChunk) captures a grandmother and grandchild's relationship through their shared wonder and admiration. Along with rich illustrations, Grandmother Moon preserves Indigenous histories and teachings within a modern setting, reminding us that Grandmother Moon is always watching over us, and wherever we are, we are safe and loved.
Backmatter includes an author's note and more, to learn about the different names of the full moons throughout the lunar year.
Reviews
"A beautiful glimpse into Native storytelling traditions and intergenerational family ties.... VERDICT A solid choice for libraries needing books on Indigenous populations or looking for an introduction to Native belief systems." --School Library Journal
Educator Information
Recommended for ages 4 to 8.
Themes, Subjects & Keywords: Moon, Family, Giving Thanks - Tobacco Offerings, Thirteen Moons on Turtle's Back, Lunar Calendar, Importance of Stories - Storytelling.
Additional Information
32 pages | 10.25" x 8.75" | Hardcover
Synopsis:
Celebrate contemporary Indigenous traditions with this illustrated children’s picture book!
A young Nisg̱a’a boy, Simgan, learns to cook hamburger soup and fry bread with Grandmother on a crisp fall day. As they gather ingredients, chop vegetables and stir the pot, Grandmother remembers coastal fishing trips and community with friends—blending Nisg̲a’a vocabulary into her stories of food, family and tradition to create cultural memory and document everyday life.
Indigenous people have many differences from Nation to Nation, yet the hamburger soup recipes in these households are often very similar. This story celebrates shared traditions, the wisdom of Elders and the importance of giving back to the community.
To assist early language learners, a pronunciation guide to the Nisg̱a’a vocabulary found within Hamburger Soup will be available on the author’s website, www.samanthabeynon.com.
Educator Information
Recommended for ages 6 to 8.
Additional Information
32 pages | 11.00" x 8.50" | Hardcover
Synopsis:
Long ago, when the buzzards were keepers of the fire, they were very stingy. On a frigid winter night Rabbit was freezing, he pleaded with the buzzards to share the warmth of their fire. The buzzards refused, yelling "This is our fire!" The playful Northwest Wind saw rabbit hopping slowly away, it decided to play tricks on Rabbit to make him even colder. Rabbit realized that If he wanted to get warm, and share the warmth with the other animals, he must come up with a clever plan.
Educator Information
Recommended for Grades 2 and under.
Additional Information
40 pages | 9.00" x 9.00" | Paperback
Synopsis:
I am not a costume.
Ayasha’s school is having a costume party and she is so excited!
But when Ayasha arrives at school and sees other students wearing fake regalia, she is confused and upset. She doesn’t understand why they think her culture is a costume. Ayasha turns to her family and together they come up with a way to teach her classmates about her culture and how to honor her people respectfully.
Educator Information
Recommended for ages 6+.
Additional Information
32 pages | 8.50" x 11.00" | Hardcover




















