Education and Career News

Imagine a World Where Every Child Can See Themselves in the Pages of a Book

Kids today need a more diverse, inclusive library. Here are a few steps we can take to ensure the best literature for our children.

In 2014, the founders of We Need Diverse Books shared this prompt on Twitter: “We need diverse books because…” Over 20,000 people responded. One teen posted, “We need diverse books because if I don’t belong to the world I was born to, then where do I belong?”

Children’s publishing continues to fall short of representing everyone. The Cooperative Children’s Book Center reports that only 27 percent of children’s books feature characters from diverse racial or ethnic backgrounds, outnumbered by white characters and animals. Similar disparities exist for children’s books featuring diverse religions, disability, and LGBTQIA+ representation. 


In the fourth collaboration with We Need Diverse Books, “A Universe of Wishes” is a powerful and inclusive collection contains a universe of wishes for a braver and more beautiful world.


Racism and prejudice are learned behaviors. Repeatedly reading books that lack diverse representation or promote negative stereotypes can lead children to view the world through a biased lens. The underrepresented young reader can begin to feel invisible. Creating a world where every child can see themselves in a book disrupts racism and prejudice and fosters self-esteem, empathy, and social action.

#WeNeedDiverseBooks, now what?

During a global pandemic and repeated reports of police brutality, parents and educators are turning to books to help young readers understand current events, process trauma, and act on issues they care about. Buying diverse books for your home or school library is just the first step. We can do more, and here’s how: