Incoming Resources
- We wait for the sun, by Dovey Johnson Roundtree and Katie McCabe ; pictures by Raissa Figueroa
- Lighter than air, Sophie Blanchard, the first woman pilot, Matthew Clark Smith ; illustrated by Matt Tavares
- Born to swing, Lil Hardin Armstrong's life in jazz, Mara Rockliff ; illustrated by Michele Wood
- The women I think about at night, traveling the paths of my heroes, Mia Kankimäki ; translated by Douglas Robinson
- Hidden figures, the true story of four black women and the space race, by Margot Lee Shetterly with Winifred Conkling ; illustrated by Laura Freeman
- Who is Greta Thunberg?, by Jill Leonard ; illustrated by Manuel Gutierrez
- Women heroes of the American Revolution, 20 stories of espionage, sabotage, defiance, and rescue, Susan Casey
- Louisa May Alcott, by Lori Fromowitz ; content consultant, Adam Bradford Ph.D
- Girls solve everything, stories of women entrepreneurs building a better world, Catherine Thimmesh ; illustrated by Melissa Sweet
- No truth without Ruth, the life of Ruth Bader Ginsburg, by Kathleen Krull ; illustrated by Nancy Zhang
- Joanna Gaines, Paige V. Polinsky
- Fall down seven times, stand up eight, Patsy Takemoto Mink and the fight for Title IX, written by Jen Bryant ; illustrated by Toshiki Nakamura
- Who was Sally Ride?, by Megan Stine ; illustrated by Ted Hammond
- Proud, living my American dream, Ibtihaj Muhammad
- Dreamers, Yuyi Morales
- A history of me, written by Adrea Theodore ; illustrated by Erin K. Robinson
- Saving American Beach, the biography of African American environmentalist MaVynee Betsch, written by Heidi Tyline King ; illustrated by Caldecott honoree Ekua Holmes
- The youngest marcher, the story of Audrey Faye Hendricks, a young civil rights activist, Cynthia Levinson ; illustrated by Vanessa Brantley Newton
- Who was Joan of Arc?, by Pam Pollack and Meg Belviso ; illustrated by Andrew Thomson
- The true story of Pocahontas, by Lucille Recht Penner ; illustrated by Pamela Johnson
- Who was Marie Antoinette?, by Dana Meachen Rau ; illustrated by John O'Brien
- Fighting for yes!:, the story of disability rights activist Judith Heumann, by Maryann Cocca-Leffler ; illustrated by Vivien Mildenberger ; with a note from Judith Heumann
- Who was Sacagawea?, by Dennis Brindell Fradin and Judith Bloom Fradin ; illustrated by Val Paul Taylor
- The girl who drew butterflies, how Maria Merian's art changed science, Joyce Sidman
- Ida B. Wells, by Diane Bailey
- Jane Goodall, animal scientist, by Katherine Krohn ; illustrated by Cynthia Martin and Anne Timmons.
- What Miss Mitchell saw, written by Hayley Barrett ; illustrated by Diana Sudyka
- How to hear the universe, Gaby González and the search for Einstein's ripples in space-time, by Patricia Valdez ; illustrated by Sara Palacios
- Who was Amelia Earhart?, by Kate Boehm Jerome ; illustrated by David Cain
- Marie Curie, Demi
- Meghan Markle, Rebecca Felix
- A kids' guide to America's first ladies, Kathleen Krull ; illustrated by Anna Divito
- Kamala Harris, rooted in justice, written by Nikki Grimes ; illustrated by Laura Freeman
- Alabama spitfire, the story of Harper Lee and To Kill a Mockingbird, written by Bethany Hegedus ; illustrated by Erin McGuire
- Who was Harriet Tubman?, by Yona Zeldis McDonough ; illustrated by Nancy Harrison
- The lion queens of India, Jan Reynolds
- Stone girl, bone girl, by Laurence Anholt ; illustrated by Sheila Moxley
- Wilma unlimited, how Wilma Rudolph became the world's fastest woman, Kathleen Krull ; illustrated by David Diaz
- Dancing hands, how Teresa Carreño played the piano for President Lincoln, Margarita Engle ; illustrated by Rafael López
- Queen of the diamond, the Lizzie Murphy story, Emily Arnold McCully
- Streetcar to justice, how Elizabeth Jennings won the right to ride in New York, by Amy Hill Hearth
- Temple Grandin, how the girl who loved cows embraced autism and changed the world, by Sy Montgomery
- Cleopatra, queen of Egypt, written by Clint Twist ; [illustrations, Ian Andrew, Diz Wallis, and Eloise A. Lambert]
- The important thing about Margaret Wise Brown, Mac Barnett and Sarah Jacoby
- Trailblazer, the story of ballerina Raven Wilkinson, by Leda Schubert ; illustrated by Theodore Taylor III ; with a foreword by Misty Copeland
- Who was Maria Tallchief?, by Catherine Gourley ; illustrated by Val Paul Taylor
- Shirley Chisholm is a verb!, written by Veronica Chambers ; illustrated by Rachelle Baker
- Try it!, how Frieda Caplan changed the way we eat, written by Mara Rockliff ; illustrated Giselle Potter
- The double life of Pocahontas, Jean Fritz
- Harriet Tubman, conductor on the Underground Railroad, Ann Petry