2025’s Best LGBTQ Board, Picture, and Chapter Books for Holiday Giving

The LGBTQ-inclusive board, picture, and chapter books of 2025 have been joyous, affirming, sometimes hilarious, and often beautiful. Here are some that stand out for holiday giving (or any time of year).

2025’s Best LGBTQ Board, Picture, and Chapter Books for Holiday Giving

Click titles for full reviews—and for even more titles I didn’t have room for here (e.g., Pride titles that I covered extensively in June), visit my Database of LGBTQ Family Books.

Author(s) and illustrator (if different) follow each title.

Board Books

Board books with queer representation include three affirming odes from parents to children: Baby, You’re a Rainbow (Sophie Beer); You’re Fabulous As You Are (Sophie Beer); and You Are My Rainbow (Michael Joosten, Monge Lua). Additionally, We’re All in This Together highlights community and caring (Ernie Young, Sarah Walsh); Little Feminists: Becoming Siblings, celebrates many types of families (Shuli de la Fuente-Lau), and How We Love (Kati Douglas and Ashley Jefferson) uses photographs of real families to show how children and those around them express their love.

Early Readers and Chapter Books

For early readers, try the friendship-focused Whale and the Birthday Rocks (Whale, Quail, Snail #4) (Erica Perl, Sam Ailey), which includes the nonbinary Snail.

Chapter books saw the start of two new series: Witchycakes, about a nonbinary witch who helps at their Mama’s bakery (Kara LaReau, Ariane Moreira; two volumes published); and Bucket and Friends, about a nonbinary child and friends making change in their community (Tom Rademacher, Esther Hernando, three volumes published). Several existing series added sequels, including Ella Josephine: Resident in Charge, about a girl with two moms and their apartment-house neighbors (Nina LaCour, Sonia Albert); the graphic novel Batcat: Cooking Contest! with adorable nonbinary protagonists (Meggie Ramm); and the delightfully silly How to Win the Gruesome Games (Villains Academy), about a young werewolf with two dads who is learning to be bad (though not really) (Ryan Hammond).

Picture Books

Several picture books feature two-mom families without being “about” queerness: Far, Far Away, about a boy and his moms on a canoe trip (Molly Beth Griffin, Bao Luu); Embarrassed Ferret, in which the protagonist amusingly overcomes awkward moments (Lisa Frenkel Riddiough, Andrea Tsurumi); The Pirate Moms, a rollicking high-seas tale (Jodie Lancet-Grant, Lydia Corry), and Shabbat Is …, about how different Jewish families within one synagogue (including one with two moms and another with a nonbinary cousin celebrating their b’nai mitzvah) observe Shabbat in different ways (A.J. Sass, Noa Kelner)..

The same was true for some titles featuring two-dad families: Papa’s Coming Home, in which a family welcomes a dad’s return (Chasten Buttigieg, Dan Taylor); Night Flight, an evocative bedtime story (David Barclay Moore, Briana Mukodiri Uchendu); and Mai’s Áo Dài, about embracing both heritage and individuality (Thai Nguyen and Monique Truong, Dung Ho).

Additionally, My Dad Is the Best pokes gentle fun at masculine posturing within a blended two-dad family (Fran Pintadera, Joan Turu); Like That Eleanor stars a girl with two dads becoming an ally to a nonbinary classmate (Lee Wind, Karl West); The Gathering Table tells of a Black family’s traditions and milestones, including the wedding of the narrator’s uncles (Antwan Eady, London Ladd); and O.K. Is Gay: A Picture Book features a boy who finds support (and surprising understanding) from his friends as he seeks to tell them about his new relationship (Vincent X. Kirsch).

Families formed via donor conception, including surrogacy, may also want to check out My Donor Story Book Builder, which lets purchasers customize a book that reflects their own family story and appearance.

Books with nonbinary protagonists felt particularly thoughtful, with Call Me Gray, a tender tale about a nonbinary child and their father (Andrew and Bells Larsen, Tallulah Fontaine); Dancing with Water, an evocative story of heritage and caring for the Earth (Gwendolyn Wallace, Tonya Engel); and Snow Kid, a lovely fable about personal growth (Jessie Sima).

Books about gender expression this year include: So Devin Wore a Skirt, a sweet story of unconditional family love (Shireen Lalji, Lucy Fleming); Raven’s Ribbons, about a gender creative (possibly Two-Spirit) indigenous child finding affirmation in family and community (Tasha Spillett, Daniel Ramirez); I Want to Dance in Pants, about a girl who doesn’t want to wear a dress for her quinceañera (Jess and Ruymán Hernandez, Teresa Martinez); and Make Your Own Rainbow: A Drag Queen’s Guide to Colors, an ode to color and creativity (Lil Miss Hot Mess, Olga de Dios).

Biographies this year feature:

On a nonfiction note, My Gender, My Rules will help kids and their adults have important conversations about gender and feelings (Andy Passchier), while The Bi Book is an ode to “bi” things like bicycles, bilingual people, and bisexuality, “Because bi hearts love in a rainbow of ways” (A.J. Irving, Cynthia Alonso).

Finally, for the holidays, try: Fa La La Family, a cheery rhyming book about how Christmas is for families of all kinds (Scott and Mark Hoying, Steph Lew); and Banana Menorah, in which a girl with two dads finds a creative solution to a forgotten Hanukkah menorah (Lee Wind, Karl West).

Originally published with slight variation as my Mombian newspaper column.

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