2023 Five Star Picture Books (nonfiction)

It’s been another crazy year of reading, with my current total at 343. Much of that has been kids/teens reading through homeschooling and Cybils Awards first round panelist reading. So, like last year, I’m not picking favorites but highlighting my 5 star reads by category.

Since I read over 100 nonfiction books for Cybils alone, this will be two separate posts. SO MANY fantastic books! Let’s start with the ones told about specific people. The first two are my favorites.

The Indestructible Tom Crean: Heroic Explorer of the Antarctic by Jennifer Thermes. 56 pages, 2023

Gage and I studied Antarctica this year so I was so excited to see this book on the Cybils first round reading list. I love everyhing about this book. Tom has many dangerous adventures exploring Antarctica. If cats have 9 lives, I think Tom may have been part cat. Sure to please any adventure loving kid.

A Bowl of Peace: A True Story by Caren Stelson and Akira Kusaka. 40 pages, 2020

What a beautiful, heartbreaking, gut wrenching, hopeful picture book about Sachiko Yasui, a survivor of the atomic bomb dropped on Nagasaki, Japan during WWII.

Sachiko and her family always ate out of her grandmother’s bowl, filling it with the delicacies of the region, until the war forced plainer fare. At 6, she was half a mile from ground zero. It killed all of her playmates and one of her siblings. Two of her brothers died soon after from radiation exposure.

When the family went back 2 years later they found her grandmother’s bowl in the rubble of their home, unscathed. Every August 9, first her mother and then she, put ice in the bowl to remember those last.

I cannot recommend this book enough for your middle schooler, but be prepared to talk about death and the ugliness of war. Gage knew the details of the war but this story really brought the people to life.

Sachiko outlived her family and died in 2021 at the age of 83. I’ll be feeling this book for awhile.

Ice Cream Man: How Agustus Jackson Made a Sweet Treat Better by Glenda Armand and Kim Freeman, illustrator Keith Mallett. 40 pages, 2023

In 1820, at just 12 years old, he made his way from Philadelphia to the White House to work in the kitchen. He served 3 presidents before heading home and opening up his own ice cream shop where his innovation led to shipping ice cream to other cities.

Tiny Jumper: How Tiny Broadwick Created the Parachute Rip Cord by Candy Dahl, illustrator Maithili Joshi. 40 pages, 2023

Performing in the air from a young age, Tiny Broadwick became the first woman to parachute from an airplane. Often overlooked because of her size, she proved underestimating her only made her work harder. Inspiring.


One City, Two Brothers by Chris Smith, illustrator Aurelia Fronty. 32 pages, 2007

This folktale of how Jerusalem came to be is beautifully told and illustrated.


Sisters in Science: Marie Curie, Bronia Dluska, and the Atomic Power of Sisterhood by Linda Elovitz Marshall and Anna & Elena Balbusso. 40 pages, 2023

Most of us know about Marie Curie. This is the story of Marie and her sister Bronia, successful in her own right. 


Beulah Has a Hunch!: Inside the Colorful Mind of Master Inventor Beulah Louise Henry by Katie Mazeika. 40 pages, 2023

“Beulah’s brain worked differently. She had hyperphantasia, which meant she saw things in extreme detail in her mind, as well as synesthesia, which caused words and numbers and even music notes to show up as different colors in her brain. Beulah’s unique way of seeing the world helped her think up vivid solutions to problems—her hunches came to her fully formed with gears whirring and wheels spinning. She invented everything from a new and improved parasol to cuddly stuffed animals and from ice cream makers to factory machinery. Beulah’s inventions improved daily life in lots of ways, earning her the nickname “Lady Edison,” and she became one of the most prolific inventors in American history.” from Goodreads.


My Night in the Planetarium: A True Story About a Child, a Play, and the Art of Resistance by Innosanto Nagara. 24 pages, 2016

My Night in the Planetarium tells a bit of the country’s history and politics (like a few pages worth, so it’s not overwhelming) with true experiences of the author’s childhood during the resistance.

Gage and I both loved the humor and conversational flow. I especially loved the real photos that were included and what happened after the night in the planetarium when the government police came for his family. Highly recommend for the older elementary and above reader. 

Just One Pebble: One Boy’s Quest to End Hunger by Dianna Wilson Sirkovsky, illustrator Sara Casilda. 32 pages, 2023

An inspiring 9 year old who saw a problem and didn’t look away. 


To Boldly Go: How Nichelle Nichols and Star Trek Helped Advance Civil Rights by Angela Dalton, illustrator Lauren Semmer. 40 pages, 2023

In the 1960s she became a trailblazer as the first black woman on the TV show Star Trek, and she used her platform to make a huge impact for women in STEM. I loved reading Martin Luther King Jr.’s influence. And I just this cover!


King Sejong Invents and Alphabet by Carol Kim, illustrator Cindy Kang. 32 pages, 2021

This tells how the 15th century king wanted ALL Koreans to be able to read and write. Knowledge is Power. 


Zhang Zheng and the Incredible Earthquake Detector by Randal McGee. 32 pages, 2021

The Emperor tasks Zhang Zheng with finding a way for the those in charge to know when deadly earthquakes have taken place. Great story and fabulous illustrations.


Just Being Dali: The Story of Artist Salvador Dali by Amy Gullielmo, illustrator Brett Helquist. 40 pages, 2021

A fantastic book with excellent illustrations. The recurring theme was no matter what people said Salvador Dali just kept being himself. This was one of those quick reads when we studied Spain.


Never Give Up: Dr. Kati Kariko and the Race for the Future of Vaccines by Debbie Dadey, illustrator Juliana Oakley. 40 pages, 2023

“She became fascinated by science as a child and grew up determined to find a way to use messenger RNA―a copy of a part of DNA that provides cells with instructions to make proteins―to help fight illness. An mRNA vaccine had never been made before, and she faced frequent criticism and was told by other scientists she would never succeed. Kariko refused to give up her research, and when the COVID-19 pandemic hit, she played a critical role in developing the successful Pfizer-BioNTech mRNA vaccine faster than any other vaccine in history.” from Goodreads

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