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Diverse Families
 

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  • Wandering Son, Vol. 3 (Wandering Son #3) by Takako Shimura

    Wandering Son, Vol. 3 (Wandering Son #3)

    Takako Shimura

    Shuichi and his friend Yoshino have a secret: Shuichi is a boy who wants to be a girl, and Yoshino is a girl who wants to be a boy. But one day, abruptly, their secret is exposed, and the two find themselves the target of sixth-grade cruelty. Their friendship is strained, as Yoshino makes a half-hearted effort at being a 'normal girl'-- and their mentor, Yuki, reveals the harder reality of being transgendered. Meanwhile, Shuichi's sister, Maho, realizes her dream of becoming a model, and drags Shuichi along for the ride. Shuichi meets another boy who wants to be a girl, and finds himself on an arranged date with a boy who doesn't know that the girl he has a crush on is actually a boy.

  • Wandering Son, Vol. 4 (Wandering Son #4) by Takako Shimura

    Wandering Son, Vol. 4 (Wandering Son #4)

    Takako Shimura

    Two Japanese tweens who find themselves coping with the knotty issue of gender identification, as they slowly realize that maybe they aren't who they were meant to be.

  • Wandering Son, Vol. 5 (Wandering Son #5) by Takako Shimura

    Wandering Son, Vol. 5 (Wandering Son #5)

    Takako Shimura

    Shuichi, a boy who wants to be a girl, and Yoshino, a girl who wants to be a boy, become friends in junior high school, where they tackle problems such as gender identity, love, social acceptance, and puberty.

  • Wandering Son, Vol. 6 (Wandering Son #6) by Takako Shimura

    Wandering Son, Vol. 6 (Wandering Son #6)

    Takako Shimura

    Faced with unwanted changes to their growing bodies, male-identified Takatsuki-san discovers the wonders of "breast binders," and female-identified Nitori-kun explores the limits of his ability to "pass."

  • Wandering Son, Vol. 7 (Wandering Son #7) by Takako Shimura

    Wandering Son, Vol. 7 (Wandering Son #7)

    Takako Shimura

    Nitori-kun gets his first signs of acne. This may well be the end of the world. But when he turns to nationally famous model Anna-chan for help, events take an unexpected turn. Meanwhile, Nitori-kun and Chiba-san are scouted by the theater club after the success of their gender-bending play, The Rose of Versailles. But when Takatsuki-san congratulates Chiba-san, Chiba-san calls her a hypocrite. If Takatsuki-san wanted to join the theater club, she wouldn't congratulate Chiba-san -- she'd be jealous. So says Chiba-san, but what does she know?

  • Wandering Son, Vol. 8 (Wandering Son #8) by Takako Shimura

    Wandering Son, Vol. 8 (Wandering Son #8)

    Takako Shimura

    Nitori-kun, a boy who wants to be a girl, explores kissing with girlfriend Anna-chan; and Yoshino-san, a girl who wants to be a boy, finds the courage to go to school wearing a boy's uniform. Meanwhile, one of their male classmates, Doi-kun, who has caused our protagonists misery in the past, becomes intrigued with their grown-up friend Yuki-san, a transwoman. But Nitori-kun finds himself strangely drawn to Doi-kun.

  • War of the Eagles by Eric Walters

    War of the Eagles

    Eric Walters

    During World War II near Prince Rupert, British Columbia, Jed comes to better understand and take pride in his British and native Tsimshian ancestry through caring for an injured eagle at a military fort and losing his Japanese Canadian best friend to an internment camp.

  • Was It the Chocolate Pudding?: A Story for Little Kids About Divorce by Sandra Levins

    Was It the Chocolate Pudding?: A Story for Little Kids About Divorce

    Sandra Levins

    A little boy learns that he did not cause his parent's divorce because of the mess he made with chocolate pudding, and describes his new life living with his dad and seeing his mom on weekends.

  • Watch the Stars Come Out by Riki Levinson

    Watch the Stars Come Out

    Riki Levinson

    Grandma tells about her mama's journey to America by boat, years ago.

  • Water Balloon by Audrey Vernick

    Water Balloon

    Audrey Vernick

    A warm debut novel about friendship and first love, from a popular picture-book author. Marley's life is as precarious as an overfull water balloonone false move and everything will burst. Her best friends are pulling away from her, and her parents, newly separated, have decided she should spend the summer with her dad in his new house, with a job she didn't ask for and certainly doesn't want. On the upside is a cute boy who loves dogs as much as Marley does ... but young love has lots of opportunity for humiliation and misinterpreted signals. Luckily Marley is a girl who trusts her instincts and knows the truth when she sees it, making her an immensely appealing character and her story funny, heartfelt, and emotionally true.

  • Waterbound by Jane Stemp

    Waterbound

    Jane Stemp

    In a futuristic society sixteen-year-old Gem discovers that a group of handicapped people who call themselves the Waterbound live hidden beneath the City.

  • Water Bugs and Dragonflies: Explaining Death to Young Children by Doris Stickney

    Water Bugs and Dragonflies: Explaining Death to Young Children

    Doris Stickney

    After a water bug suddenly leaves her pond and is transformed into a dragonfly, her friends' questions about such departures are like those children ask when someone dies.

  • Wave Good-Bye by Francess Lantz

    Wave Good-Bye

    Francess Lantz

    Rae hasn't been her usual self lately, and no one at camp seems to know why. Her crabby attitude is starting to affect everyone, including her best friend, Luna. When Luna catches Rae precariously riding the piers, she decides to confront her friend head-on. Finally Rae admits the truth: her parents have decided to separate, and even worse -- her father's company is relocating him to Chicago. Now Rae feels torn between staying in southern California with her overbearing mother and moving with her father to an unfamiliar city. Though leaving would ease the tension between Rae and her mom, it would mean the end of Rae's surfing, too. Will Luna be able to convince Rae to stick around or will she lose her best friend forever?

  • Way to Go by Tom Ryan

    Way to Go

    Tom Ryan

    Danny thinks he must be the only seventeen-year-old guy in Cape Breton-in Nova Scotia, maybe-who doesn't have his life figured out. His buddy Kierce has a rule for every occasion, and his best friend Jay has bad grades, no plans, and no worries. Danny's dad nags him about his post-high-school plans, his friends bug him about girls and a run-in with the cops means he has to get a summer job. Worst of all, he's keeping a secret that could ruin everything.

  • We Adopted You, Benjamin Koo by Linda Walvoord

    We Adopted You, Benjamin Koo

    Linda Walvoord

    Nine-year-old Benjamin Koo Andrews, adopted from Korea as an infant, describes what it's like to grow up adopted from another country.

  • We are Adopted by Jennifer Moore-Mallinos

    We are Adopted

    Jennifer Moore-Mallinos

    An adopted girl welcomes her baby brother whom her parents have also adopted from Russia, and she describes the reasons for adoption, what life is like as an adopted child, and her interactions with other adopted children.

  • We Are Family by Patricia Hegarty

    We Are Family

    Patricia Hegarty

    Explore the differences and similarities of eight families in this gentle, rhyming picture book.

  • We Are Okay by Nina LaCour

    We Are Okay

    Nina LaCour

    Marin hasn’t spoken to anyone from her old life since the day she left everything behind. No one knows the truth about those final weeks. Not even her best friend Mabel. But even thousands of miles away from the California coast, at college in New York, Marin still feels the pull of the life and tragedy she’s tried to outrun. Now, months later, alone in an emptied dorm for winter break, Marin waits. Mabel is coming to visit and Marin will be forced to face everything that’s been left unsaid and finally confront the loneliness that has made a home in her heart.

  • We Are the Ants by Shaun David Hutchinson

    We Are the Ants

    Shaun David Hutchinson

    Abducted by aliens periodically throughout his youth, Henry Denton is informed by his erstwhile captors that they will end the world in 144 days unless he stops them by deciding that humanity is worth saving.

  • We Are the Youth by Diana Scholl and Laurel Golio

    We Are the Youth

    Diana Scholl and Laurel Golio

    We are the youth is an ongoing photographic journalism project chronicling the individual stories of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender youth in the United States. Through portraits, by photographer Laurel Golio, and as-told-to personal essays, by writer Diana Scholl, this book captures the incredible strength and diversity of LGBT youth.

  • W.E.B. Du Bois (Biographies of Biracial Achievers) by Jim Whiting

    W.E.B. Du Bois (Biographies of Biracial Achievers)

    Jim Whiting

    Highlights the life and accomplishments of the African American scholar and leader who devoted himself to gaining equality for his people.

  • We Belong Together: A Book About Adoption and Families by Todd Parr

    We Belong Together: A Book About Adoption and Families

    Todd Parr

    The joy of adoption and bringing families together is presented in this tale.

  • Wednesday, A Walk in the Park by Phylliss DelGreco, Jaclyn Roth, and Kathryn Silverio

    Wednesday, A Walk in the Park

    Phylliss DelGreco, Jaclyn Roth, and Kathryn Silverio

    Jessie spends a glorious day in the park with Grandpa, frolicking, in the falling leaves, swinging on the swings, and encountering a variety of other people. In the ordinary course of walking and talking and playing, Grandpa imparts his wisdom and love of life, and Jessie see in him what she hopes to be. "Wednesday, A Walk in the Park" is the third book in The Jessie Books series, which offers an inspiring story for each day of the week, featuring a precocious little girl who lives with her two moms in Queens, New York.

  • We Don't Look Like Our Mom and Dad by Harriet Langsam Sobol

    We Don't Look Like Our Mom and Dad

    Harriet Langsam Sobol

    A photo-essay on the life of the Levin family, an American couple and their two Korean-born adopted sons, ten-year-old Eric and eleven-year-old Joshua.

  • Weekends with Max and His Dad by Linda Urban

    Weekends with Max and His Dad

    Linda Urban

    Third-grader Max pursues neighborhood adventures with his dad as they both adjust to recent changes in their family.

 

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