Incoming Resources
- Copycat, nature-inspired design around the world, Christy Hale
- The wisdom of trees, how trees work together to form a natural kingdom, Lita Judge
- Voices of the people, Joseph Bruchac ; illustrated by Sonny Assu [and others]
- Eb & Flow, Kelly J. Baptist
- Calling the Moon, 16 period stories from BIPOC authors, edited by Aida Salazar and Yamile Saied M̌ndez
- Beastly verse, [illustrated by] JooHee Yoon
- From the bellybutton of the moon and other summer poems, Del ombligo de la luna y otros poemas de verano, poems, Francisco X. Alarcón ; illustrations, Maya Christina Gonzalez = Del ombligo de la luna y otros poemas de verano / poemas, Francisco X. Alarcón ; ilustraciones, Maya Christina Gonzalez
- Funny girl, funniest. stories. ever., edited by Betsy Bird
- The in-between, a memoir in verse, by Katie Van Heidrich
- A song for Gwendolyn Brooks, Alice Faye Duncan ; illustrated by Xia Gordon
- Imagine, Juan Felipe Herrera ; illustrated by Lauren Castillo
- Dandelion, written and illustrated by Gabbie Hanna
- Poūkahangatus, Tayi Tibble
- Somewhere we are human, authentic voices on migration, survival, and new beginnings, edited by Reyna Grande, Sonia Guiñansaca
- No land in sight, poems, Charles Simic
- Remember, poem by U.S. poet laureate Joy Harjo ; illustrations by Caldecott Medalist Michaela Goade
- Dearly, new poems, Margaret Atwood
- When green becomes tomatoes, poems for all seasons, by Julie Fogliano ; pictures by Julie Morstad
- Black girl magic, a poem, by Mahogany L. Browne ; art by Jess X. Snow
- The best American poetry 2023, Elaine Equi, editor ; David Lehman, series editor
- Hello, Earth!, poems to our planet, written by Joyce Sidman ; illustrated by Miren Asiain Lora
- The death of sitting bear, new and selected poems, N. Scott Momaday
- Bright brown baby, a treasury, by Andrea Davis Pinkney ; illustrated by Brian Pinkney
- Pirate queens, dauntless women who dared to rule the high seas, Leigh Lewis ; illustrated by Sara Gómez Woolley
- Ain't burned all the bright, Jason Reynolds ; illustrated by Jason Griffin
- Brown, poems, Kevin Young ; photographs by Melanie Dunea
- Legacy, women poets of the Harlem Renaissance, by Nikki Grimes ; artwork by Vanessa Brantley-Newton, Cozbi A. Cabrera [and 15 others]
- Everything comes next, collected and new poems, by Naomi Shihab Nye
- Dearly, new poems, Margaret Atwood
- American melancholy, poems, Joyce Carol Oates
- Stories for African American History Month
- Float, Anne Carson
- Where we come from, Diane Wilson, Sun Yung Shin, Shannon Gibney, John Coy ; illustrated by Dion MBD
- For every one, Jason Reynolds
- Violet bent backwards over the grass, Lana Del Rey
- No more poems!, a book in verse that just gets worse, by Rhett Miller ; art by Dan Santat
- The collected works of Jim Morrison, poetry, journals, transcripts, and lyrics, foreword by Tom Robbins ; edited with an introduction by Frank Lisciandro ; prologue by Anne Morrison Chewning
- A collection of poems, by Robert Frost ; introduction by Ken Mondschein
- Dictionary for a better world, poems, quotes, and anecdotes from A to Z, Irene Latham & Charles Waters ; illustrated by Mehrdokht Amini
- Bravo!, poems about amazing Hispanics, Margarita Engle ; illustrated by Rafael Lâopez
- Black boy joy, 17 stories celebrating Black boyhood, edited by Kwame Mbalia ; stories by B.B. Alston [and 16 others]
- Citizen, an American lyric, Claudia Rankine
- Serengeti, plains of grass, written by Leslie Bulion ; illustrated by Becca Stadtlander
- Sakamoto's swim club, how a teacher led an unlikely team to victory, written by Julie Abery ; illustrated by Chris Sasaki
- Every day we get more illegal, Juan Felipe Herrera
- Climbing the volcano, a journey in haiku, Curtis Manley ; pictures by Jennifer K. Mann
- My name is Jason. Mine too, our story, our way, Jason Reynolds ; illustrated by Jason Griffin
- Where I live, poems about my home, my street, and my town, selected by Paul B Janeczko ; illustrated by Hyewon Yum
- A hatful of dragons, and more than 13.8 billion other funny poems, Vikram Madan
- How to write a poem, by Kwame Alexander and Deanna Nikaido ; art by Melissa Sweet