Award-Winning Books: 2026

A Hero's Guide to Summer Vacation

The following books were recognized by a variety of book/media awards in 2026 as award winners and honorees. These include the Pura Belpré Award, the Newbery Award, the Caldecott Medal, the Walter Award, the National Book Award, and the Asian/Pacific American Librarians Association Award for Literature.

A Hero’s Guide to Summer Vacation

A Hero’s Guide to Summer Vacation
Age Level: 9-12, Middle Grade

Gonzalo Alberto Sánchez García has never considered himself the hero of his own story. He’s an observer, quietly snapshotting landscapes and drawing the creatures he imagines emerging from them. Forced to spend the summer with his estranged grandfather, Alberto William García — the very famous reclusive author — Gonzalo doesn't expect to learn that heroes and monsters are not only the stuff of fantasy.

A Sea of Lemon Trees: The Corrido of Roberto Alvarez

Boy looking out from lemon trees

Twelve-year-old Roberto Alvarez is the youngest of his siblings, born on United States soil. He’s el futuro, their dream for a life away from the fire of the Mexican Revolution.

Moved by anti-immigrant and anti-Mexican propaganda, the Lemon Grove school board and chamber of commerce create a separate “Americanization” school for the Mexican children attending the Lemon Grove Grammar School. But the new Olive Street School is an old barn retrofitted for the children forced to attend a segregated school.

A Vaisakhi to Remember

A Vaisakhi to Remember
Illustrated by: Japneet Kaur
Age Level: 6-9

When a Sikh family moves from their village in India to a faraway city on the other side of the world, a girl yearns for her grandmother's hugs, her goat Ramu, and the lush fields filled with yellow flowers and wheat. How will they celebrate Vaisakhi in her new and unfamiliar surroundings?

But the girl soon discovers soothing touchstones — a special outfit, a trip to gurdwara, delicious food, and new friends — that make gathering for Vaisakhi still the best day of all.

All the Blues in the Sky

All the Blues in the Sky
Age Level: Middle Grade

Sage's thirteenth birthday was supposed to be about movies and treats, staying up late with her best friend and watching the sunrise together. Instead, it was the day her best friend died. Without the person she had to hold her secrets and dream with, Sage is lost. In a counseling group with other girls who have lost someone close to them, she learns that not all losses are the same, and healing isn't predictable. There is sadness, loneliness, anxiety, guilt, pain, love. And even as Sage grieves, new, good things enter her life-and she just may find a way to know that she can feel it all.

Picking Tea with Baba

Picking Tea with Baba
By: Xu Bin
Illustrated by: Yu Yin
Age Level: 6-9

A young boy and his brother travel with their parents up the mountainside to their tea garden for a day of work. They delight in the animals they see, compete to see who can pick the most tea leaves, take a lunch break, and weather an unexpected rainstorm. At the end of the day, they trek back down the mountain to sell the leaves before going home.

The Nine Moons of Han Yu and Luli

The Nine Moons of Han Yu and Luli

In ancient Chang’An, Han Yu sells steamed buns in a bustling market full of whispers about his ability to summon tigers. In New York’s Depression-era Chinatown, Luli gazes out from the roof of her parents’ restaurant, dreaming of dim sum and Chinese art. Familiar rhythms rule the contained-but-contented lives of Han Yu and Luli.

The Strongest Heart

Boy sitting against a tree
Age Level: Middle Grade

Mo is used to his father’s fits of rage. When Abbu's moods shake the house, Mo is safe inside his head, with his cherished folktales: The best way to respond is not to engage. Apparently, his mama knows that too—which is why she took a job on the other side of the world, leaving Mo alone with Abbu.

Wanda Hears the Stars: A Blind Astronomer Listens to the Universe

Wanda Hears the Stars: A Blind Astronomer Listens to the Universe

A nonfiction biography of astrophysicist Wanda Díaz Merced and how losing her sight didn't stop her from studying the stars.

Growing up in Puerto Rico, Wanda Díaz Merced wanted to learn everything she could about the stars. But in college she started losing her sight. How could she study what she couldn't see? Wanda found a way. She learned to hear the stars using sonification, which converts data into sounds. Listening to those chimes and drumbeats, she made new discoveries about the universe.