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Making Our Voices Heard: Books About Activism for Kids

by Laura Lambert

What does activism look like to a preschooler — or a fifth grader? How do we teach them what it means to stand up for our rights, for social justice, for greater equality and protections? How do we articulate the values and ideas we believe are worth fighting for — especially in ways that a kid can truly hear?

Well, through books and stories, for one. Here are some titles to jumpstart the conversation of what it means to show up, speak out, resist, and persist on behalf of our own beliefs — and for those who may not have a voice.

  • A is for Activist

    by Innosanto Nagara

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    While A is for Activist uses alliteration and rhyming to get its message across, this isn’t your typical ABC book. Instead of apples, dogs, and frogs, you have “activists,” “little d democracy,” and “feminists.”

    F is for Feminist.
    For Fairness in our pay.
    For Freedom to Flourish
    and choose our own way.

    Oakland-based author Innosanto Nagara, who was born and raised in Indonesia, originally wrote the book to help capture and convey progressive values to his own son. Now, this bestselling board book is helping to frame up young activism for the preschool set.

    If you like A is for Activist, check out Nagara’s follow-up counting book, Counting on Community.
    (Ages 3 – 7)

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  • Show Up and Vote

    by Ani DiFranco, illustrated by Rachelle Baker

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    From singer-songwriter, activist, feminist, and bestselling author Ani Di Franco comes a lyrical picture book that sensitively portrays a young girl's experience accompanying her mother to vote, emphasizing the significance of this civic duty in an authentic and relatable manner.
    (Ages 3 – 7)

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  • Enough! 20 Protesters Who Changed America

    by Emily Easton, illustrated by Ziyue Chen

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    This galvanizing collection of portraits introduces young readers to some of the most influential protestors in our country’s history and of today. From Harriet Tubman and Martin Luther King Jr. to Colin Kaepernick and transgender teen Jazz Jennings, budding activists will learn about these incredible and brave leaders who shaped — and continue to shape — a brighter tomorrow through their varying forms of protest. The book opens with a foreword from a Parkland shooting survivor and concludes with additional context about each protestor and their respective causes.
    (Ages 5 – 8)

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  • Pride: The Story of Harvey Milk and the Rainbow Flag

    by Rob Sanders, illustrated by Steven Salerno

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    Children’s books like Pride help us remember that the history of LGBTQ+ rights, gay pride, and the rainbow flag is relatively recent, and hold up the bravery and leadership of people like Harvey Milk — whose activism paved the way for greater equality.

    After Pride, add Stonewall to the conversation: a picture book by the same author-illustrator team that explains the powerful history behind the 1969 Stonewall Uprising, as narrated by the Stonewall Inn itself.
    (Ages 5 – 8)

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  • Lillian's Right to Vote

    by Jonah Winter, illustrations by Shane W. Evans

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    It’s Election Day, and Lillian, a 100-year-old African American woman, is taking an uphill journey to her polling place. She’s determined to make her voice heard, and as she walks, she invites the reader on flashbacks into her family’s past. We see her great-grandfather voting for the first time after the passage of the Fifteenth Amendment, her parents meeting pushback on their own voter registrations, and Lillian marching in the 1965 civil rights protests in Selma, Alabama. Blending the personal and historical, Lillian’s Right to Vote encourages us to celebrate victories while also remembering the past.
    (Ages 5 – 9)

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Editor’s Note: This article was originally published in 2019 and updated in 2024.