I first encountered the term "Incidental Diversity" in the HornBook article "2015 in Review: The Year in Pictures" by Julie Danielson. Incidental Diversity is "the appearance of characters of color whose ethnicities are incidental to the story."
Now I'm actively on the lookout for such books. Here are 9 books that Julie featured in her article, plus 1 more too good not to share:
Narrative nonfiction about space/planets and light pollution.
Leo is a ghost who has a hard time making friends.
A beautifully illustrated collection of "poems for all seasons."
(truth in advertising!)
(truth in advertising!)
Sophia wants a pet giraffe, and with every ask,
is required to be less verbose.
is required to be less verbose.
Great mentor text for writing persuasion.
A Classic. Peter goes out and plays in the snow.
"A Book About the Water Cycle" (more truth in advertising!)
The joys and sorrows of raising and keeping chickens.
What James really said and what came back to the main character via the mouths of several friends are two different things.
The trials and tribulations of raising a dinosaur in the city.
Okay, I'm cheating a little on this one. It's a nearly wordless graphic novel, not a picture book per se. But it's so fun, and it goes together with Peter Brown's WILD ROBOT in such interesting ways...robot washes ashore, learns how to be himself, is hunted down by the Robot Corporation to be taken back and made to be
what is expected from a robot.
what is expected from a robot.