If it were up to Hollywood, high school would be a place where popular kids never get zits, every student is a professional dancer, and geeks are one makeover away from becoming prom queen. Yeah, not so much. IRL, the halls of high school harbor angst, absurdities, and awkwardness. Oh, and hormones. Gobs of hormones. Luckily, there are those films that do get the experience right. Ahead are 21 high school movies you’ll want to watch with your tweens and teens. And who knows? Maybe they’ll open up about a thing or two.

Looking for other movies to watch with kids? Check out our favorite movies with a father-daughter bond, our favorite movies about friendship, and the best coming-of-age movies that should be required viewing.

Booksmart

Olivia Wilde’s directorial debut perfectly portrays the experience of overcoming misconceptions. Seniors Molly and Amy are closing out high school with Ivy Leagues on the horizon. When they learn the social crowd is also headed to equally esteemed schools, they decide to indulge in a little teenage debauchery the night before graduation. A familiar narrative, maybe, but Wilde’s injection of female friendship and a cast that flies the rainbow flag freely make this high school movie so very special.

Stream it on Tubi

Bottoms

Ayo Edebiri (The Bear) and Rachel Sennott (Bodies Bodies Bodies) team up for a queer comedy about two best friends who start an after-school fight club to attract the attention of their dream girls and lose their virginity before graduation. Warped and exaggerated, yet authentic and relatable, Emma Seligman’s satirical take on the awkward high school experience is grade-A hilarity and exactly the knockout crowd-pleaser we are coming to expect from the darkly comedic director on the rise.

Stream it on Prime Video

CODA

Ruby has a lot on her plate. The only hearing person in her family, she helps run her father’s fishing boat, acts as her family’s interpreter, and haggles with fish buyers—and that’s before she even gets to school. But Ruby, a senior, has a secret: She loves to sing and wants to attend the Berklee College of Music. Cue the clash with her parents. A three-time Oscar winner, Sian Heder’s tearjerker isn’t without its stereotypes, but above all, it’s a genuine, relatable, and thoughtful representation of deaf culture.

Stream it on Apple TV+

The Half of It

Set in the Pacific Northwest, The Half of It unfolds through Ellie Chu, a 17-year-old wordsmith recruited by an athlete to help him write a love letter to the girl they are both crushing on. Sound familiar? That’s because Alice Wu’s near-perfect rom-com is a modern take on Cyrano de Bergerac. Here, Wu subverts teen movie tropes and instead focuses on connections made outside of messy hormonal drama. But where the film really gets it right is right there in its tagline: “Not every love story is a romance.”

Stream it on Netflix

10 Things I Hate About You

We could list 10 things we love about this 1999 rom-com, but to save time and space, we’ll just say Karen McCullah and Kirsten Smith’s screenplay is a feminist take on Shakespeare’s Taming of the Shrew, and that’s reason enough to hit play. If you need more, this high school movie about two sisters and the boys trying to court them is also bolstered by strong performances from its core cast (Heath Ledger, Julia Stiles), while offering fresh takes on themes of sibling rivalry, ruined reputations, and self-identity.

Stream it on Disney+

Lady Bird

Lady Bird is a great high school movie
A24 Films

Greta Gerwig takes a drive down her own memory lane (or nightmare alley, depending on how you look at it) for the narrative in Lady Bird. Written and directed by the Sacramento native, the film was inspired by her own coming-of-age, capturing teenage angst like no other. Beyond accurately representing the all-encompassing, overly dramatic flirtatious moments with boys and the spirited bond between two best friends, Gerwig’s depiction of the nuances of the mother/teen-daughter relationship gets an A+.

Stream it on Prime Video

Moxie

Amy Poehler steps behind the lens to direct the film adaptation of Jennifer Mathieu’s same-name novel. Though a work of fiction, Moxie pulls from the author’s own experiences with the Riot Grrrl movement of the ’90s to tell a coming-of-age story about a shy 16-year-old who fights the patriarchy in her school by publishing a feminist zine. Sexism, antiquated traditions, toxic masculinity: Poehler takes care to highlight today’s seemingly benign behaviors and offers a master class on how to dispel them.

Stream it on Netflix

Dope

Shameik Moore will steal your heart as Malcolm, a straight-A student navigating street crime, peer ridicule, and, of course, the SATs. He and his best friends live in a neighborhood of Inglewood called the Bottoms, but if Malcolm and his Harvard aspirations are any indication, he’s headed straight for the top. That is until a run-in with a drug dealer threatens to derail everything. Blending hood drama with teen comedy, Dope is a highly entertaining take on being young, Black, and othered in today’s America.

Stream it on Netflix

To All the Boys I’ve Loved Before

Author Jenny Han’s beloved To All the Boys trilogy got the Netflix treatment, with the streamer adapting each book for the screen over three years. But, it’s the first installment, introducing Lara Jean and Peter, that deserves all the X’s and O’s. A reinvented rom-com that revamps tired tropes, celebrates diversity, and speaks to anyone who’s ever had a crush, TATBILB begins with Lara Jean’s love letters being mysteriously mailed to their recipients and ends by giving rise to one of the best YA couples of all time.

Stream it on Netflix

Prom Pact

Two tropes that often mosey their way into high school comedies? Proms and pacts. Usually, both intertwined with another coming-of-age trope: S-E-X. But director Anya Adams breaks the formulaic mold with Prom Pact, a rom-com about a feminist firebrand in the making, her plucky best friend, and their agreement to go to prom as long there’s no slow dancing. A sleeper hit of 2023, this send-up of seminal ’80s classics like Pretty in Pink subverts expectations, offering instead a thoughtful charmer full of surprises.

Stream it on Disney+

Related: 15 Movies Your Tweens Will Watch without Rolling Their Eyes

The Hate U Give

The Hate U Give
20th Century Fox

Starr Carter is living a double life. During the week, she attends a predominantly white prep school. But on the weekends, she lets loose in Garden Heights, the lower-income neighborhood where she grew up. It’s only after one fateful night, when her best friend is killed by a police officer, that her two paths converge and she finds her singular voice. An important film, George Tillman Jr.’s hefty crime drama might be the conversation starter you need to talk with your kids about race and police brutality.

Stream it on Prime Video

Remember the Titans

Based on the real-life events surrounding Coach Herman Boone and the integration of his high school football team, Remember the Titans is a Disney classic that delivers all the chill bumps. Not only does it offer a glorious sports story, but the film’s depiction of a divided Southern town that eventually unites is inspiration gold. Of course, this is the House of Mouse, where saccharine flourishes always win out, but, hey, when a film recruits Ryan Gosling, Marvin Gaye, and Denzel Washington, it simply can’t lose.

Stream it on Disney+

The Edge of Seventeen

You know those movies that are so easy to watch you don’t want them to end? This is one of those movies. Set during the fall season, this gem from writer/director Kelly Fremon Craig stars Hailee Steinfeld as Nadine, a 17-year-old tortured by her own emotions and hormones. When her best friend, Krista, starts dating her older brother, well, life gets worse. A candid coming-of-age tale told with refreshing wit and charming zing, Seventeen is a welcome addition to the teen drama canon.

Stream it on TBS

Mean Girls

High school: where kids can recite the quadratic equation and evaluate limits, but get stumped when it comes to figuring out girl rules. This is why we can’t forget about Mean Girls, a fun romp about a naive teen (Lindsay Lohan) who upends the social hierarchy at her new school. Though it might be a bit exaggerated, thanks to the hilarious contributions of writer Tina Fey, this Mark Waters classic high school movie tackles the harsh reality of bullying and the consequences of trying to fit in with the wrong crowd.

Stream it on Paramount+

Do Revenge

Sure, Do Revenge takes up residence in the privileged lives of high schoolers who go to tennis camp, throw lavish parties, and frequent ritzy country clubs, but there are elements of this Gen Z prize that ring true. Namely navigating bullies, female friendships, and the consequences of digital living. A contemporary watch, Do Revenge is also an homage to the teen-coms that defined yesteryear (Heathers, Clueless, Easy A). Not to mention, it has a truly stellar soundtrack both parents and their teens will enjoy.

Stream it on Netflix

Related: 14 Coming-of-Age Movies That Should Be Required Viewing

Love & Basketball

Love & Basketball is a great high school movie
40 Acres and a Mule Filmworks

Sex happens. So, thank goodness there are filmmakers like Gina Prince-Bythewood who pay special attention when depicting the act on the screen. Starring Sanaa Lathan and Omar Epps, Love & Basketball tracks one couple’s relationship over the decades, with most of their narrative set during high school. Beyond authentically portraying the aforementioned “first time” (with a particularly memorable needle drop, we might add), the movie explores gender equality in sports, celebrating women’s basketball with the shout-out it deserves.

Stream it on Hulu

Chang Can Dunk

It’s the beginning of his sophomore year and Chang, a 16-year-old NBA buff whose other interests include band and the new girl named Christy, has only one goal: Prove to the entire school he can slam dunk. His aspiration to fly through the air like a swag god is the result of some alpha-male rivalry, part of what first-time director Jingyi Shao gets right about the hormone headquarters also called high school. Beyond the courtside machismo, Shao weaves in the immigrant experience and delivers a winning coming-of-ager the whole family will love.

Stream it on Disney+

The Breakfast Club

The quintessential scribe of ’80s teen angst, John Hughes is responsible for several iconic films. Perhaps the most heralded? The Breakfast Club. Capturing the essence of cliques and the pressure to conform, the film spends a Saturday in detention bonding with a group of archetyped students. Although some scenes don’t hold up today (an observation made by Molly Ringwald herself), this cult classic reminds us that no matter how different we may seem on the surface, we are all the same insecure youths on the inside.

Stream it on Prime Video

Superbad

Directed by Greg Mottola and written by real-life best friends Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg, Superbad turns the raunch dial way up for an essential high school movie comedy that really nails the teen experience, the idea of the bromance, and the awkwardness that infiltrates the halls of every high school. About two social outcasts who throw a house party to impress some girls, the 2007 film also changed the genre at the time, openly hurling penis jokes and packing its reel with as much coital chatter as its R rating would allow.

Stream it on Prime Video

Dazed and Confused

Richard Linklater always gets slice-of-life filmmaking right. From Boyhood to Everybody Wants Some to this retro delight, the Texas director is a master of nostalgia, essentially making the viewer feel like a tourist in a series of Polaroids snapped during personal milestones. Set in 1976 on the last day of school, Dazed and Confused does just that as it tags along with a group of teens maneuvering spilled beers, bong clouds, and unruly upperclassmen. Familiar faces include Matthew McConaughey and Ben Affleck.

Stream it on Prime Video

 

 

Hidden Figures is a must-watch Women’s History Month movie

March is Women’s History Month! Here are 12 fact-based films about women that can spark great conversations with your kids. From a 1960s classic about Helen Keller and Anne Sullivan to new documentaries chronicling women and girls all around the world, these powerful Women’s History Month movies are an excellent way to celebrate the strong females of yesterday, today, and tomorrow.

A Ballerina’s Tale
Misty Copeland was the first African-American principal dancer for New York's American Ballet Theater. Copeland's place in ballet history—and American history—comes to life in this engrossing documentary.

Recommended for ages 9 and older

Directed by Nelson George

(Sundance Selects, 2015)

Anne Frank Remembered
Through interviews with schoolmates, relatives, camp survivors, and the family's heroic protector, Miep Gies, this powerful documentary completes the story of young Anne Frank’s last days.

Recommended for ages 9 and older

Directed by Jon Blair

(Columbia Tristar, 1995)

Hidden Figures is a good Women's History Month movie

Hidden Figures
Based on the nonfiction book by Margot Lee Shetterly, Hidden Figures is the true story of three brilliant African-American women who worked for NASA in the 1950s and '60s as "human computers.”

Recommended for ages 10 and older

Starring Octavia Spencer as Dorothy Vaughn, Janelle Monae as Mary Jackson, and Taraji P. Henson as Katherine Johnson.

Directed by Theodore Melfi

(Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation, 2016)

The Miracle Worker
This outstanding classic is based on the true story of two of the great figures of American history, Helen Keller and Annie Sullivan Macy.

Recommended for ages 10 and older

Starring Patty Duke as Helen Keller and Anne Bancroft as Annie Sullivan

Directed by Arthur Penn

(MGM/UA, 1962)

RBG is a good women's history month movie

RBG
This riveting documentary chronicles the extraordinary life and career of Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, highlighting the esteemed jurist's lifelong fight for gender equality.

Recommended for ages 10 and older

Directed by Julie Cohen and Betsy West

(Magnolia Pictures, 2018)

Amelia
A historical biopic about the famed female pilot Amelia Earhart offers an uplifting message and a strong role model for preteen girls and boys.

Recommended for ages 11 and older

Starring Hilary Swank as Amelia Earhart

Directed by Mira Nair

(Fox Searchlight, 2009)

Betty & Coretta
This is a poignant tribute to the courage and fortitude of two lesser-known civil rights heroes: Dr. Betty Shabazz and Coretta Scott King, the widows of Malcolm X and Martin Luther King, Jr.

Recommended for ages 11 and older

Directed by Yves Simoneau

Starring Angela Bassett as Coretta and Mary J. Blige as Betty

Directed by Yves Simoneau

(Lifetime, 2013)

Speed Sisters
Spirited, inspiring documentary teaches kids about the first all-female car racing team in the Middle East and the stark realities of Palestinian life on the West Bank. 

Recommended for ages 11 and older

Directed by Amber Fares

(Dogwoof Global Sales, 2017)

A Brave Heart: The Lizzie Velasquez Story
This moving documentary is about a woman who was born with a very rare congenital disease that makes her look unlike anyone else. The inspiring story is a must-see for anyone who's ever felt like they just didn't fit in, and Lizzie—who has fought tirelessly against bullying—is an amazing role model.

Recommended for ages 12 and older

Directed by Sara Hirsh Bordo

(Cinedigm, 2015)

Girl Rising
Girl Rising
is an informative, educational documentary about the lives of impoverished girls living in countries where education for girls isn't a priority. It’s the kind of stirring film that parents should watch with their mature tweens or teens and then discuss the ideas it raises—girl empowerment, education, and equality. 

Recommended for ages 12 and older

Directed by Richard Robbins

(GathrFilms, 2013)

He Named Me Malala
This inspiring and deeply affecting documentary explores the life of iconic teen Nobel Prize winner Malala Yousafzai.

Recommended for ages 12 and older

Directed by Davis Guggenheim

(Twentieth Century Fox, 2015)

on the basis of sex is a good women's history month movie

On the Basis of Sex
On the Basis of Sex is another 2018 film about Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, this one a biographical drama that covers her time as one of a handful of women attending Harvard Law School in the late 1950s to her first groundbreaking gender-discrimination case in the early '70s. 

Recommended for ages 12 and older

Starring Felicity Jones as Ruth Bader Ginsburg

Directed by Mimi Leder

(Focus Features, 2018)

 

Common Sense Media
Tinybeans Voices Contributor

Common Sense Media is an independent nonprofit organization offering unbiased ratings and trusted advice to help families make smart media and technology choices. Check out our ratings and recommendations at www.commonsense.org.

These Earth Day books for kids are perfect for getting them excited about taking care of our planet

April 22nd is Earth Day! And if you’re ready to start teaching your kids about “climate change” means or what to do about trash in the park to celebrate, reading a book to inspire them is a great step in becoming global citizens! These Earth Day books for kids don’t just highlight problems: they offer actionable solutions that kids of any age can implement in their homes, schools, and communities and demonstrate that one person can have a huge impact on the planet. From books about recycling to stories about endangered animals, these books are sure to educate and entertain your little ones. And they’re all written by award-winning authors and illustrators, so you know they’re good!

Be the Change: Rob Greenfield’s Call to Kids―Making a Difference in a Messed-Up World

Amazon

Every day, we contribute to the pollution and environmental issues in our world; now what? Rob Greenfield's actionable book tells the story of his own commitment to saving the planet, and gives tangible and realistic ways every person can work towards reducing our carbon footprint and changing our habits for good. Ages: 8+

Be the Change: Rob Greenfield’s Call to Kids―Making a Difference in a Messed-Up World ($16.35)—Buy Now!

Only One

Amazon

While our world hosts billions of people, plants, and animals, there's only one Earth for us to take care of. Young environmentalists will thoroughly enjoy this journey from Earth's birth to the exploration of galaxies, continents and more! Deborah Hopkinson and Chuck Groenink do a wonderful job incorporating eye-catching illustrations with straightforward facts that all readers can understand.

Only One ($12.29)—Buy Now!

Your Planet Needs You

Amazon

We may be one of billions of Earth's inhabitants, but that doesn't mean we can't make a difference! Philip Bunting breaks down the history of waste—what it is, where it comes from, and why we keep making so much of it. After a few whimsical stories comes the good stuff: how to save the earth. Creative illustrations and simple how-to's make this book a must for everyone, not just kiddos. Ages: 5+

Your Planet Needs You ($19.99)—Buy Now!

Once Upon a Forest

Amazon

No words are needed for this sweet tale that follows a young marmot who witnesses a forest fire. Shared with gorgeous illustrations by Pam Fong, little readers will walk away with the message that we can all do our part to help save and restore the earth, no matter our size! Ages: 4-8

Once Upon a Forest ($16.91)—Buy Now!

This Is the Tree We Planted

Amazon

A tree is more than just leaves and a trunk: it's a home to wildlife that everyone can learn from. Kate McMullan weaves a story that not only shows how one small action can produce a big result, but will inspire kids to become nature lovers, too! Ages: 4-7

This Is the Tree We Planted ($17.99)—Buy Now!

Wombat Underground: A Wildfire Survival Story

Amazon

Beautifully illustrated by Charles Santoso, this story by Sarah Thomson follows animals in the Australian forest as they live peacefully only to encounter a dangerous wildfire. Told in a way that educates young children on climate change, this story co-mingles lessons on compassion, the environment, refugees, and coming together under times of turmoil.

Wombat Underground: A Wildfire Survival Story ($12.59)—Buy Now!

THE EARTH BOOK

Amazon

This classic by Todd Parr takes on the topics of environmental protection and conservation in a book for very young readers! Printed on recycled materials and using non toxic soy inks, this picture book has been in print since 2010 and is both an homage to our beautiful planet and a young Earth activist's guide to understanding why caring about the environment is so important. Ages: 3-6

THE EARTH BOOK ($9.59)—Buy Now!

Alba and the Ocean Cleanup

Amazon

In this gorgeously illustrated book by author-illustrator Lara Hawthorne, we meet Alba, a fish who loves to collect objects that fall down to the ocean floor. The beauty and diversity of color and life in the ocean are showcased and then contrasted with the ever-increasing presence of trash. Ocean plastics are taking over: but what can Alba (and you) do to help? Read an enchanting story followed by actionable ways to save the ocean’s vital ecosystems! Ages: 3-7

Alba and the Ocean Cleanup ($12.99)—Buy Now!

I Hear You, Forest

Amazon

Forest bathing comes naturally to children and Kallie George’s new nature book for kids reminds us all how the sounds of nature can be restorative to our minds and bodies. The forest has a lot to say if you listen! From the creaks of the trees to the nibbles of the squirrels, the forest is forever revealing secrets to those willing to listen. Read this book and head out for a hike. Carmen Mok’s illustrations are both whimsical and realistic, making you wish you were napping on a forest floor right now. Ages: 3-7

I Hear You, Forest ($17.95)—Buy Now!

A New Harvest

Amazon

A devastating tornado leaves Rodrigo and his family homeless. But through his community and a strong connection with nature, Rodrigo finds a way to build a new life. He begins a farm where he can grow food to not only feed his family, but others like him. The book is printed on the publisher Cuento de Luz’s signature stone paper, and all of author Cristina Expósito Escalona's income from royalties will be donated to the Homeless Garden Project. Illustrated Miguel Ángel Díez. Ages: 4-8

A New Harvest ($12.49)—Buy Now!

Crossings: Extraordinary Structures for Extraordinary Animals

Amazon

Katie S. Duffield’s forthcoming collaboration with Illustrator Mike Orodán celebrates nature through the wildlife crossings that exist around the world. From a bridge over a Canadian interstate to monkeys on rope bridges to bears under an overpass, Crossings teaches kids what happens when the non-natural world and the creatures of nature collide, celebrating both the ingenuity of animals and encouraging conservation and awareness. Ages 3-8

Crossings: Extraordinary Structures for Extraordinary Animals ($15.49)—Buy Now!

Endangered Animals and How You Can Help

Amazon

In this exquisite book by Sam Hutchinson, children are taken on a journey through seven different habitats to learn about the animal kingdom’s challenges. Children explore more than 70 different animal species that are endangered or threatened due to climate change and pollution as well as species that are thriving thanks to conservation efforts! The format is unique—illustrator Sarah Dennis uses her collage style to create seek-and-find and monochrome images, inviting children to explore further. The book also contains lots of tips about how we can help the species. Ages: 6-9

Endangered Animals and How You Can Help ($13.82)—Buy Now!

A Kids Book About Climate Change

Amazon

The “A Kids Book About” series takes on challenging topics (racism, death, being transgender, and more) and and breaks them down into easy-to-read kids’ books that help both kids and their grown-ups have frank, honest conversations together. In A Kids Book About Climate Change, youth activists Zanagee Artis and Olivia Greenspan take the overwhelming topic of climate change and explain it in understandable terms offering facts about the current state of our planet, how we got here, and how to fight for our future. Ages: 4-8

A Kids Book About Climate Change ($19.95)—Buy Now!

Luna & Me: The True Story of a Girl Who Lived in a Tree to Save a Forest

Amazon

Author-illustrator Jenny Sue Kostecki-Shaw brings the story of Julia Butterfly Hill’s famous protest to life in this exploration of what it means to be an activist! Julia Butterfly Hill lived in a redwood tree for over 2 years to protect it from being cut down. The tree became affectionately known as Luna. Julia refused to come down from the tree until the lumber company who wanted to cut it down agreed not to. An inspiring reminder for kids of what just one person can do to make a difference! Ages: 5-9

Luna & Me: The True Story of a Girl Who Lived in a Tree to Save a Forest ($14.99)—Buy Now!

The Brilliant Deep: Rebuilding the World's Coral Reefs

Amazon

If you like the kind of book that makes you want to literally dive into its pages, this is the book for you! With dreamy illustrations by Matthew Forsythe, it's the powerful story of Ken Nedimyer’s quest to rescue the world’s coral reefs. Written by Kate Messner, it reminds kids everywhere that “it starts with one.” Not only will you be enchanted by the layout of the book, but you’ll also be inspired by Ken. Includes a coral-reef glossary and ways kids can help. Ages: 6-9

The Brilliant Deep: Rebuilding the World's Coral Reefs ($12.39)—Buy Now!

Walking for Water: How One Boy Stood Up for Gender Equality

Amazon

In this inspiring story, artfully told by Susan Hughes with beautiful, graphic-novel style illustrations by Nicole Miles, we meet young Victor and his twin sister, Linesi, two Malawi kids who love going to school. But when they turn 8, Victor learns that because Linesi is a girl, she is no longer allowed to attend school. Instead, she walks to the river to get water each day. Soon, Victor begins to understand what gender equality means and comes up with a plan to change things.

This is not just a story about gender equality, though. It is about unequal access to education. It is also about access to clean water, and how there are people in the world who don't have it. Your kids will not only learn how one person can make a difference, but they will also understand the importance of a global mindset. Includes a glossary of Chichewa words. Ages: 7-10

Walking for Water: How One Boy Stood Up for Gender Equality ($17.99)—Buy Now!

This Class Can Save the Planet

Amazon

An excellent gift to any class, this book shows kids the huge impact they can have on the environment and immediate, actionable steps they can take to protect it! It’s full of great ideas that teachers can implement in their classroom (making paint from dry markers!) or kids can do at home. It’s a positive way to approach climate change, with solutions that are completely doable, helping parents and kids talk about something that can feel daunting and scary for kids. Buy one for your kiddo’s class today! Ages: 4-10+

This Class Can Save the Planet ($12.99)—Buy Now!

How to Make a Better World: For Every Kid Who Wants to Make a Difference

Amazon

This guide by Keilly Swift comes with a foreword by Jamie Margolin, a Columbian American climate activist, which sets the tone for the upbeat and inspiring book. While the author does not shy away from the grim reality, she offers tons of solutions, ideas, and advice for becoming an advocate for climate justice! Going beyond the lists of “what you can do to save the planet,” this book takes on the subtitles of what it really takes to help the Earth every day. She even discusses how to handle tricky situations when people aren’t always nice or empathetic to your cause. Ages: 7-9

How to Make a Better World: For Every Kid Who Wants to Make a Difference ($16.99)—Buy Now!

You Can Change the World: The Kids' Guide to a Better Planet

Amazon

Author Lucy Bell has a message for kids of the world: you can make a difference! This illustrated book is packed with colorful images designed to present solutions to children in a way they relate. From reuse (mending clothes, compost), recycling, and reducing (avoid single-use plastics and make conscious consumer choices), this is the practical guide for any family to make significant changes in their household starting today. Ages: 8-12

You Can Change the World: The Kids' Guide to a Better Planet ($11.59)—Buy Now!

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A few things we’d be missing without them: Grand Central, Washington Square Park, and dozens of masterpieces in our major museums

International Women’s Day is March 8, and of course, we celebrate women’s history all month long. So, we’re taking some time to recognize some of the women who have had an incredible impact on our home, New York City. These incredible New Yorkers have blazed trails, saved buildings and neighborhoods, crashed through all kinds of ceilings and often made the country (even the world!) a better place. (Because when New Yorkers have an impact, it tends to be far-reaching.) Read on for our list of women who changed NYC forever.

Emily Warren Roebling

Public Domain

That famous bridge in Brooklyn? It wouldn't have happened without this lady. Married to Washington Roebling, the chief engineer of the Brooklyn Bridge, Emily took over when he fell ill and could no longer supervise the project. (Apparently he watched its progress from the couple's home in Brooklyn Height via telescope.) Roebling was one of the first people to cross the bridge when it was done, which she did from the Brooklyn side, holding a rooster as a symbol of victory. You can find a plaque at the base of the bridge celebrating her leadership and contribution. 

 

Shirley Chisholm

Creative Commons

Brooklyn-born Shirley Chisholm was a trailblazer not just for New Yorkers, but for women and Black people around the country. An outspoken advocate for racial justice and women's rights, as a New York State Representative in 1968, she was the first African American woman in Congress, and later co-founded of the National Women's Political Caucus in 1971. In 1972, she sought the Democratic nomination for the office of President of the United States, becoming the first woman or Black person to do so for one of the two major political parties. In 1977, she became the first Black woman and second woman ever to serve on the powerful House Rules Committee. 

Margaret Sanger

Library of Congress

Founder of the birth control movement, Margaret Sanger was a nurse who spent her entire career working to give women access to reproductive health information and contraception. Publisher of a feminist magazine and worker's rights advocate, she opened the first birth control clinic in 1916 in Brownsville, Brooklyn. In 1923 she opened a clinic staffed by women doctors and social workers, which went on to become the Planned Parenthood Federation of America.  

 

Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis

Public Domain

While of course Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis was known the world over as widow of John F. Kennedy, she became a New Yorker following his death and spent the rest of her life here. She is widely recognized as being a key force in saving Grand Central Terminal, which was slated to meet the same fate of the demolished Penn Station. As part of the Municipal Arts Society's "Committee to Save Grand Central Terminal" she was a vocal advocate for its preservation. The Committee's victory and its related Supreme Court decision, the New York City Landmark Law resulted in the protection of thousands of other historic buildings throughout the city.  

Billie Holiday

Library of Congress

Born in Philadelphia and landing in New York City by way of Baltimore, Billie Holiday had no formal vocal training, but went on to become one of the most celebrated jazz singers in the world. She worked with bandleaders Count Basie and Artie Shaw, and collaborated frequently with saxophonist Lester Young, a partnership that produced some of the duo's finest work. Holiday helped integrate the nightclub community in the city in the 40s and 50 and around the country, and her style and voice had a profound effect on night life.

Jane Jacobs

Public Domain

Activist and urbanist Jane Jacobs' influence on New York was, and continues to be, profound. Author of the now-seminal urban planning text The Death and Life of Great American Cities, she famously went head-to-head with New York official Robert Moses to combat his program of "urban renewal." A resident of Greenwich Village, she is credited with helping to preserve its character and was a fierce advocate for quality of life and community-building in cities. She was instrumental in preventing the construction of the Lower Manhattan Expressway, which would have run through several downtown neighborhoods, radically changing them.  

Sonia Sotomayor

United States Government

Like her fellow Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Sonia Sotomayor was born in New York City (she's from the Bronx, Ginsburg hails from Brooklyn). And while Ginsburg did do some work in NYC (she taught at Columbia), Sotomayor spent the bulk of her career prior to joining the Supreme court working in The Big Apple. Under the city's District Attorney Robert Morgenthau, she prosecuted cases for crimes such as robbery, assault, murder and police brutality. Later in her career, she served as a U.S. District Court judge for the Southern District of New York City, and helped educate the next generation of legal practitioners as a professor at New York University and Columbia Law School. After serving on the U.S. Second Circuit Court of Appeals, Barack Obama appointed her to the Supreme Court, where of course she wields incredible influence on not just the people of New York City, but the entire country. She has played a key role in upholding the Affordable Care Act and same-sex marriage in the United States. 

Edith Wharton

Wikimedia Creative Commons

Born into a life of privilege, Edith Wharton used her gift as a writer to chronicle and critique the world of high society in New York. In 1921, she became the first woman to win the Pulitzer Prize, for Age of Innocence. She was subsequently nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1927, 1928 and 1930. Other works of Wharton's include House of Mirth and Ethan Frome.

Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney

Public Domain

Born into the wealthy Vanderbilt family in 1875, Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney was a sculptor and art collector. She became a champion of contemporary American artists, and when the Metropolitan Museum of Art refused her donation of her considerable collection of American work, she established the Whitney Museum of American Art in 1930. She was the leading patron of American art at the time of her death in 1942, and her personal collection of more than 600 works remains the core of the celebrated museum's holdings. Currently, the influential Whitney Museum of Art is home to more than 24,000 works by over 3,500 and is a major force in the art world internationally. 

Gloria Steinem

LBJLibrary

Activist and journalist Gloria Steinem has been a leading voice in the women's movement for more than 50 years. She co-founded New York magazine, as well as, in 1972, the trailblazing Ms. magazine, where she was an editor and writer for 15 years. She has been a leading voice for women's issues and rights including reproductive health and gender equality. 

 

Dorothy Parker

Wikimedia

Dorothy Parker was one of the founding members of the Algonquin Roundtable, a group of writers, critics an intellectuals known for their keen observations and sharp wit—Parker, especially. A writer for the New Yorker, Vanity Fair and other publications, she penned fiction, poems, plays and more. Her wry, sometimes brutal takes on modern life exemplify an certain New York sensibility, and her influence is felt to this day. 

 

Naming your daughter (or your son) after your own fierce grandma or your favorite famous female in history is a way to let your kiddos know from Day One you believe in them. Read on for next-level baby name inspiration!

Shawn Miller via Wikimedia Commons

Amanda Gorman: Amanda made history when she became not only the youngest poet to read her poem at the inauguration of Joe Biden and Kamala Harris, but she also became the first National Youth Poet Laureate at just 22. Amanda's poem, "The Hill We Climb" called for hope, unity and a nation to heal without hiding from the harsh realities of injustice and the past. 

Alice Eastwood:  Born in Canada, Eastwood is best known for her work as a renowned (and self-taught!) botanist who, in 1906—after the big earthquake in San Francisco—she rescued 1497 irreplaceable botanical specimens from the Cal Academy before it fell to flames. There are 17 plant species (and two plant genera) named for her. She also hiked Mt. Shasta by herself and published over 300 scientific articles in her lifetime.

Wikimedia Commons

Anna May Wong: The first Chinese-American movie star and the first Asian-American actress to gain international fame, she used her influence to fight against the rampant racism in Hollywood, especially the offensive depiction of Chinese characters, usually played by white actors.

Amelia Earhart: The first woman to fly solo across the Atlantic Ocean, she also set an altitude record and became the first person to fly solo across the Pacific from Honolulu, HI.

 

Bobbi Gibb

Bessie Coleman: In 1922, Bessie Coleman became the first African American and Native American woman pilot in the United States. Born in Texas to a sharecropper father, she was accepted into the  Caudron Brothers' School of Aviation in Le Crotoy, France and received her international pilot's license in 1921. She tragically died in a plane crash on April 30, 1926. Ida B. Wells performed her funeral service in Chicago, and in 1931, the Challenger Pilots’ Association of Chicago started a tradition of flying over Coleman’s grave every year.

Billie Jean King: A world-renowned tennis player, Billie can count 39 World Grand Slams and three years as captain of the United States tennis team at the Federation Cup among her numerous ground-breaking accomplishments. Known as a long-time advocate for gender equality and social justice, at the age of 29, Ms. King fought and beat Bobby Griggs (he was 55 at the time) in a legendary tennis match—Battle of the Sexes. Ms. King was inducted into the Tennis Hall of Fame in 1987 and the National Women’s Hall of Fame in 1990.

Bobbi Gibb: In 1966, Bobbi Gibb wanted to run the Boston Marathon, but when she was denied entry for being a woman she did what all self-respecting women at the time did: she defied authority and ran anyway! Gibb waited a few yards away from the starting point, pulled a black hoodie over her head so no one would recognize her, and after several hundred runners began the race she jumped in! And not only did Bobbi run the race, but she finished it in 3 hours and 20 minutes (unofficially). That’s just one hour behind the winner and ahead of half the male runners. Check out this cool picture book based on Gibb’s Boston Marathon story.

Photography (Public Domain) via Wikimedia Commons

Deb Haaland: In 2018, Debra Anne Haaland became one of the first Native American women elected to Congress (along with Sharice Davids). She is the former chair of the Democratic Party of New Mexico and a member of the Laguna Pueblo people. She is also an attorney and 35th generation New Mexican.

Dolores Huerta: Huerta worked side-by-side with famous labor and farmworker advocate Cesar Chavez to help protect agricultural and immigrant workers’ rights. She founded the Agricultural Workers Association and co-founded United Farm Workers and continues to fight for the rights of Latinos and women.

Dolly Parton: Born in a one-room cabin in Tennessee, Dolly Parton grew up one of 12 children in extreme poverty. Her family was very involved in their church, and she began performing as a child. She moved to Nashville after graduating from high school and found initial success as a songwriter. Her first number-one hit was the iconic "I Will Always Love You." She saw more success in the '70s and continued to make her way in the music industry with a success that has lasted for decades. Parton is not only a musical icon, but she also co-owns The Dollywood Company and founded The Dollywood Foundation, which raises scholarship funds for high school kids and also manages The Imagination Library, a program that distributes free books to kids up to the age of five. 

Durga Banerjee: The first woman pilot in India, she became an official pilot for Indian Airlines in 1966. She was also the first woman ever to fly the Tornado A-200.

Guillermo Kahlo- Sotheby's, Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons

Frida Kahlo: Mexican-born Kahlo was just 18 with hopes of becoming a doctor when she suffered a serious injury from a traffic accident. Confined to her bed, she began painting. Her works remain today as some of the most impressive, iconic and recognizable art in history.

Florence Nightingale: Considered the founder of modern nursing herself, she organized care of wounded soldiers during the Crimean War (1853-1856). She became known as a manager and trainer of nurses who advocated for sanitary conditions in hospitals, and a holistic approach to treatment (that rest and good nutrition were key to recovery and good health). So if you want a kiddo who will wash her hands and eat her veggies, this is the name for you. 

James S. Davis via Wikimedia

Gloria Steinem: Activist, feminist, journalist, founder of Ms. Magazine and champion of women’s rights, she’s considered one of the pioneers of the American feminist movement. 

Greta Thunberg: Countless kids and young adults are trying to change the world. Swedish teen activist Greta Thunberg is the founder of the Fridays for Future movement and has already inspired many to stand up for their beliefs. She was named Time’s 2019 Person of the Year, and 2020 marked the second year in a row the 17-year-old was nominated for the Nobel peace prize. 

Grace Hopper: Grace Brewster Murray Hopper (1906-1992) was one of the first computer programmers ever in the United States. A Navy Rear Admiral, in 1944 she worked on the Harvard Mark I Computer and invented the first compiler for computer programming language. In other words, she figured out how to explain computer code to mere humans (and how to program a computer to do what humans want). In the 1940s!!! She continued working for the Navy and later for other government agencies as a high-ranking official. 

Gwendolyn Brooks: One of the most highly celebrated poets of all time, Gwendolyn was the first Black author ever to win the Pulitzer Prize. She wrote 20 books of poetry, two autobiographies and one novel. She was also Poet Laureate to the State of Illinois and the poetry consultant to the Library of Congress.

Wikimedia Commons

Hedy Lamarr: Not only was Hedy a famous Hollywood actress, but she is also credited with inventing Wi-Fi. Her groundbreaking work on spread spectrum technology is what modern-day digital communications are based on.

Harriet Tubman: Find major inspiration for doing the right thing, even when the wrong thing is the norm, by teaching your kiddos about the incredible, unflappable Harriet Tubman. Born into slavery in 1822, she emancipated herself at the age of 27 and went on to be instrumental in helping dozens of other slaves find freedom using the Underground Railroad—the system of secret safehouse and waystations from the south to the north. Tubman was an armed scout and spy during the Civil War, an early suffragist (advocate for women’s rights) and a humanitarian. She established a home for elderly African-Americans, where she later resided. Today, you can visit Harriet Tubman National Historical Park which includes her home, a visitor’s center, the Harriet Tubman Home for the Aged, and the church she raised funds to build. Her burial site is nearby. 

Wikimedia Commons

Kamala Harris: Kamala Harris made history on Jan. 21, 2021, by being sworn in as Vice President as the first woman, the first Black woman, and the first South Asian woman to be elected into the second-highest office in the nation. Long before her presidential aspirations, she was the first woman and person of color to serve as San Francisco district attorney, the first woman and first Black attorney general of California and the first Black senator from California. If you want to raise a fierce fighter who shatters glass ceilings, this name is sure to inspire. 

Jeekc via Wikimedia Commons

Jane Goodall: Possibly the most famous primatologist in the entire world, Goodall’s work with chimpanzees changed the way we view them and our relationship with (and part in the destruction of) their habitat.

Lella Lombardi: She was Italian and she was a Formula One race car driver. If that’s not reason enough to worship her, she raced in 17 Grands Prix and was the only female driver in history to finish in the top six.

Queen Liliuokalani: The last reigning monarch over the Kingdom of Hawaii, she was imprisoned in her own home in Honolulu after the rebellion attempt to overthrow the Hawaiian monarchy by U.S. soldiers and her attempts to refuse the annexation of Hawaii to the United States. Her birth name was Lydia Liliʻu Loloku Walania Wewehi Kamakaʻeha.

NASA, Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons

Mae C. Jemison: On June 4, 1987, Mae C. Jemison became the first African-American woman to enter the space program. On Sep. 12, 1992, she joined the crew of seven astronauts on the Endeavour, becoming the first African-American woman in space. Born in Decatur, Alabama and raised mostly in Chicago, Il, Jemison holds multiple awards and degrees including a B.S. in biomedical engineering and an M.D. She has worked as a medical doctor (including in the Peace Corps). As a child, Jemison spent a lot of time in her school library, reading especially books about space.

Malala Yousafzai: Want to raise a child that isn’t afraid to fight against inequality and injustice? Name your kid Malala after this brave young woman. Malala was shot in the head at age 15 after refusing to stay at home when the Taliban declared that girls could not attend school. After surviving the gunshot wound, she devoted her life to helping girls and women get the education they deserve. She won a Nobel Peace Prize winner and wrote her own children's picture book.

Margaret Atwood: She might be best known for her feminist science fiction novel, The Handmaid’s Tale, but that’s only one of her 16 novels! She is a prolific author whose stories address gender, identity, religion and myth all at once. She is the winner of numerous awards in both poetry and fiction. We like the name Atwood for a gender-neutral vibe, too. 

Marie Curie: A physicist and chemist who was not only the first woman ever to win a Nobel Prize, she was also the first person and only woman to win it twice, once for Chemistry and once for Physics. Her pioneering work includes the theory of radioactivity and discovering not one but two elements (radium and polonium).

Maya Angelou: Born Marguerite Annie Johnson, her brother nicknamed her Maya. After a difficult childhood, she found release in her writing. She was the first African American cable car operator in San Francisco, was a waitress for many years and later became an actress, singer, dancer, activist, professor and (most famously) a poet and writer. She was awarded numerous prestigious awards, including the Presidential Medal of Freedom.

Wikimedia Commons

Nichelle Nichols: Born Grace Dell Nichols (also an awesome name), Nichelle’s impressive career includes singing with Duke Ellington and playing Lt. Uhura on the Star Trek television series and movies. What you might not know is that she ran a company called Women in Motion which worked with NASA to recruit minority and female astronauts, scientists and personnel for NASA. She has served on the board for the National Space Society since the 1980s and has been a tireless advocate for exploring the final frontier.

Rachel Carson: Ensure your little one grows up to be a nature lover and defender of all creatures great and small by naming them after this fearless woman who helped end the use of DDT and other harmful chemicals in our environment. Her hard work and dedication also jump-started a grassroots campaign that eventually led to the creation of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. Her presence in the global fight for the environment continues to this day, via the Rachel Carson Prize, which is awarded to women working in the field of environmental protection.

Steve Petteway via SCOTUS

Rashida Tlaib: Rashida is a woman of firsts. She is the first Muslim woman ever to serve in the Michigan legislature and one of the first two Muslim women elected to Congress (along with Ilhan Omar).

Ruby Bridges: In 1960, Ruby was just six-years-old when she made history as the first African-American child to attend a desegregated school. She went on to live a life of activism and later formed the Ruby Bridges Foundation to fight racism and promote tolerance, respect and appreciation of differences.

Ruth Bader Ginsburg: Born Joan Ruth Bader, she was an Associate Justice on the Supreme Court of the United States, the second female justice in history. A consummate bada$*, she is a trailblazer in fighting against gender discrimination, and an outspoken advocate for (and defender of) women’s rights. 

Rosa Parks: AKA the Mother of the Freedom Movement and the First Lady of Civil Rights, Rosa Parks made history when she refused to give up her seat in the “colored” section of the bus to a white passenger. She was arrested for civil disobedience and fought it in court. This was just the beginning of many years of activism and work toward equal rights.

Wikimedia Commons

Sally Ride: The first American woman to fly in space, on June 18, 1983. She flew again in 1984. She was also a professor at UC San Diego, invented the EarthKAM project which helps kids take pictures of Earth from the International Space Station and was inducted into the Astronaut Hall of Fame in 2003.

Sharice Davids: In 2018, Sharice Davids was elected to Congress, becoming one of the first Native American women to be elected to Congress (the other is Deb Haaland, also elected in 2018) as well as the first openly gay person elected to Congress from Kansas and the first LGBT Native American elected to Congress.

Susan B. Anthony: A suffragist, anti-slavery advocate and early champion for women’s rights, she fought for the right for women to vote. She and her three sisters voted in the 1872 presidential election even though it was illegal. She was arrested, went to trial, and ordered to pay a fine which she refused. The Nineteenth Amendment (the 1920 law that finally gave women the right to vote) is named after her (Susan B. Anthony Amendment).

Sonia Sotomayor: The first Latina Supreme Court Justice in U.S. History, she holds multiple degrees and was also a U.S. District Court Judge as well as a U.S. Second Circuit Court of Appeals Judge.

Giuseppina Leone via Wikimedia Commons

Tu Youyou: Chinese born Tu Youyou took the 2015 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, primarily for her work in researching and discovering artemisinin and dihydroartemisinin, two compounds used to treat malaria. Her work has saved millions of lives. Tu’s extensive knowledge of the vast pharmacopeia of traditional and Western medicine has made her one of the most important scientists in her field. 

Wilma Rudolph: Wilma Rudolph had polio, scarlet fever and pneumonia as a child, which left doctors doubting she’d ever walk again. But Wilma didn’t agree: at 16 she competed at the 1956 Olympics in Melbourne. She won the bronze medal in the 4x100-meter relay. In 1960 she competed in Rome and won gold medals and set world records in the 100, 200 and 4x100-meter relay. Never let them get you down!

Winona LaDuke: Winona is an environmentalist, economist, activist and writer whose father was a Native American from the Gaa-waabaabiganikaag reservation in Minnesota, a member of the Ojibwe Nation. From a young age, she was inspired to advocate for sustainable farming, heritage foods and land protection for indigenous (and all) people and continues to be a pioneer and leader. 

Wú Méi: One of the few known martial arts warriors from the 17th century, Mei survived an attack at a Shaolin Monastery, fought in numerous invasions and is still known today as a founding mother of martial arts styles including Dragon Style.

Zora Neale Hurston: One of the most influential and important writers in the twentieth century, her unique voice and style that integrated her knowledge of folklore with her prose is required reading for anyone who wants to experience the true voice of African-American literature.

—Amber Guetebier

 

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Feature photo: Johnathan Borba via Unsplash

A good book is like a salve to the soul and there is no better place to find your medicine than at a local, independent book shop. As the weather starts to cool and we spend more time inside, it’s the perfect time to curl up with little bookworms and those preparing to read with a beloved old book or a new favorite. Visit the following independent book shops with tips on how to make a day trip or afternoon out of it!

San Francisco

istock

Bookshop West Portal
A true neighborhood meeting place, this beloved bookshop defines West Portal and the neighborhood wouldn’t be the same without it! Families dig outings to the West Portal hood with its retro feel and this kid-friendly bookshop is at the top of the list. With built-in benches for lounging and a third of the store dedicated to children, this low-key bookshop is an SF favorite. Bonus: The YA section is outstanding.

80 West Portal Ave
San Francisco

Hours: 11 a.m.–6 p.m. every day
Online: bookshopwestportal.com

Insider Tip: Drop by Noe Valley Bakery for a cookie and then let the kids run it off at nearby West Portal Playground.

Green Apple Books
You'll discover books jammed ceiling to floor a la Beauty and the Beast style at this literary institution. They stock both new and used children’s books in its small yet mighty kids’ sections at both locations. Plus, you can bring in your and baby’s old books to trade—just make sure they are in decent condition (read: not covered in spit-up). Check out the bargain bins out front for some deep discounts. 

506 Clement St
San Francisco

Hours: 10 a.m.–9 p.m every day
Online: greenapplebooks.com

Books on the Park

1231 9th Ave.
San Francisco

Hours:   10 a.m.– 9 p.m. every day
Online: greenapplebooks.com

Insider Tip: SF Botanical Gardens is across the street and is just the spot to meander pathways, little bridges and ponds. 

Fabulosa Books
Fabulosa Books sits at the site of the former book shop, Dog Eared Castro and is fabulous in its own way! While all books and topics are represented here, Fabulosa specializes in LGBTQ+ books, which is apropos given Castro neighborhood’s role in queer history. They also buy used books so bring in those books that are sitting on the shelf collecting dust!

489 Castro St
San Francisco

Hours: 10 a.m.- 8  “or 9ish”
Online: fabulosabooks.com

The Booksmith

 

Little book lovers will head straight to the back of the store, where they will find hundreds of titles for babies all the way up to young adults. The Booksmith offers complimentary gift-wrap and one of the best selections of greeting cards in the city, making it the perfect choice for picking up gifts.

1727 Haight St
San Francisco

Hours: 12-6 p.m. daily
Online: booksmith.com

Insider tip: Right next-door, Sparrow Bar & Kitchen’s modern American cuisine menu also has the usual munchkin options. It's a splendid place with outdoor patio seating to get your grub on while enjoying the Haight with your minis. 

Christopher's Books
The size of a postage stamp, this charming corner Potrero Hill bookstore’s motto is “Explore the Ancient Art of Page Turning.” An impressive children’s selection to explore, helpful staff and free gift wrap makes this a double-win in case your preschooler has a birthday party to attend around the corner at Recess.

1400 18th St.
San Francisco

Hours: Mon.-Sat. 10 a.m.–8 p.m., Sun. 10 a.m.-6 p.m.
Online: christophersbooks.com

Insider Tip: For spectacular views and space to run, drive up to McKinley Square’s playground. For little thrill seekers, surprise your reading buddies with a drive down Vermont—SF’s true crookedest street.

Dog Eared Books
Book-hungry San Franciscans will be well-familiar with this indie bookstore and its two locations on Valencia and Castro. Specializing in local and small press literature, you are sure to find many literary gems on the shelves here. In addition to books, the walls are filled with art from local artists for a visually stimulating environment. Make sure you check out the free box on your way out.

900 Valencia St.
San Francisco

Hours: Daily, 10 a.m.-10 p.m.
Online: dogearedbooks.com

East Bay

Ed U. via Yelp

Pegasus Books
New books, used books, big books, small books. No Bay Area indie bookstore list is complete without mentioning the good ol’ Pegasus. In various incarnations for over 45 years, there are now three Pegasus locations and we love them all! The Solano Ave store probably has the biggest kid’s section, but each location has something for everyone.

1855 Solano Ave.
Berkeley

2349 Shattuck Ave.
Berkeley

5560 College Avenue
Oakland

Hours: 10 a.m.-5 p.m. daily (All locations)

Online: pegasusbookstore.com

Insider Tip: At the Solano location, grab a waffle cone full of organic yumminess at iScream. Then head East on Solano, turn left at Alameda and take a sharp right onto Indian Rock Stairways Path (between the corner and second house)—you and your little steppers can follow the staircases past a few streets and up to Indian Rock Park for breathtaking Bay views.

Mr. Mopps’ Children’s Books
This annex of the much adored toy shop, Mr. Mopps’ Children’s Books is located four doors down from the toy store and is a bookstore built with little people in mind. They are a proud source of Equal Reads Books, which highlights books for their excellence in diversity. Click here to read more about our visit to the store.

1417A Martin Luther King Jr. Way
Berkeley

Hours: Tues.–Fri., 12-5 p.m.
Online: mrmopps.net/books

Insider Tip: Exercise those little bodies with a brisk 7-minute walk up Vine St. to Shattuck Ave. to dream of a date night at Chez Panisse then grab yourselves some slices of pizza at the famous Cheese Board Bakery.

Mrs. Dalloway's Bookstore
Handwritten reviews tucked inside books, artful displays and tiny succulents perfect for gifting are just a few of the endearing touches you will find at Mrs. Dalloways' on College Ave. This quaint bookstore boasts over 150 in-store author events most years, many by children's book authors. They give back to the community by hosting weekend fundraising events for over 25 local public and private schools.

2904 College Ave.
Berkeley

Hours: Sun., 12-5 p.m.; Mon.,-Sat., 10 a.m.-6 p.m
Online: mrsdalloways.com

Michelle C. via Yelp

Rakestraw Books
Locally owned and independently operated in Danville since 1973, this bookstore has long been a place for creativity at its finest. In a true effort to continue to bring the community together, they have continued virtual author (think: John Grisham!) visits for both adult and children’s books.

3 Railroad Ave.
Danville

Hours: Mon.–Sat., 9:30 a.m.– 5 p.m., Sun., 11 a.m.–3 p.m.
Online: rakestrawbooks.com

Insider Tip: Want something cold and delicious after book browsing? Tutti Frutti Frozen Yogurt is in the same complex.

Towne Center Books
Don’t you love when you can browse for your own books while your child is finding hers? Both locations boast over 7,000 titles with the children’s lit section being half of the store at the Pleasanton location. This community gem also offers educational toys and your bookworm might delight in the hosted birthday parties. (Think: Pirate, Science and Princess themes.)

555 Main St
Pleasanton

Livermore Location
2375 Railroad Avenue Unit #100

Hours: Sun.–Thurs., 11 a.m – 5 p.m.; Fri. & Sat., 11 a.m. –8 p.m.
Online: townecenterbooks.com

Bel and Bunna's Books
If you've ever traveled to Europe, Bel and Bunna's may feel like home for you. The shop owner fashioned this neighborhood gem after the British bookstores of her childhood and really tries to make it a literary wonderland where kids learn to love reading. A virtual daily circle or story time invites little readers to tune in from the comforts of home. Read all about our visit here.

3581 Mt Diablo Blvd.
Lafayette

Hours: Mon.-Sat., 11a.m.-5 p.m.; closed Sunday
Online: belandbunnasbooks.com

Peninsula

Ink Spell Books
One block off Main Street in downtown Half Moon Bay, the cozy chairs and couches at this book shop will draw your little readers in to curl up with a book or two. While a train table occupies little hands, parents can browse their large selection of adult books, used books, toys, games and even clothes. With every budget in mind, Ink Spell welcomes all to visit and has something for everyone!

500 Purissima St
Half Moon Bay

Hours: Daily 10 a.m.-6 p.m.
Online: inkspellbooks.com

The Reading Bug
This family-owned, heartfelt shop is designed to look more like an enchanted forest than a typical bookstore and will thrill kids of all ages. Delightful morning story times are held every Friday and Saturday and they even have a free kids podcast that will read to your kids! 

785 Laurel St.
San Carlos

Hours: Tues.-Sat., 11:00 a.m.–5 p.m.; Sun. 11 a.m.–4 p.m.; closed Mondays.
Online: thereadingbug.com 

Insider tip: You cannot go wrong with Cowabunga Ice Cream right next door. In addition, to work off some energy before heading back on the road, take a 10-minute walk to the delightful and leafy Burton Park which sports a splash pad, tot and school age play sections plus bocce courts. Hiller Aviation Museum is just a short flight over the freeway.

Reach and Teach
Unique puzzles, gifts, books, toys and green lifestyle products are just some of what Reach and Teach offers. Deeply rooted in peace, gender equality and social justice issues along with sustainable living, this book shop also offers soap refills! So stop by for a gift or two and leave with all your soap needs fulfilled for clean and happy kiddos.

144 West 25th Avenue
San Mateo

Hours: Tues.-Sun. 12-4 p.m.
Online: reachandteach.com

Christine Lai

Linden Tree Children’s Books
With over 90 percent of its store devoted to children, Linden Tree Books is a 40-year-old local favorite. Kids will love the outdoor seating area where weekly story times are held and parents will love that Manresa Bakery (yes, from the Manresa restaurant) is next door and can grab a coffee plus kouign amann. Yes, please. 

265 State St
Los Altos

Hours: Mon.- Fri., 10 a.m. – 6 p.m.; Sat & Sun 9:30-5:30 p.m.
Online: lindentreebooks.com

Insider tip: After your Linden Tree visit, take a five-minute walk to gorgeous Shoup Park for play on its two playgrounds and exploration of the dry Adobe Creek bed that you can use to walk or run all the way to the wooden platform observation decks of Redwood Grove Nature Preserve.

Bookasaurus
This cool expansion bookstore from next door neighbor Leigh's Favorite Books (which, with over 40,000 titles is somewhere you should visit, too!) is devoted to kids' books, educational toys and games. The very back of the store is filled with all things toddler and babies (think: adorable accessories) - we dare you to try leaving this store with just one item. 

125 S. Murphy Ave.
Sunnyvale

Hours: Mon.-Sat., 10 a.m.-6 p.m.; closed Sundays 
Online: leighsbooks.com

Insider’s tip: Plaza del Sol and Philz coffee are on the block over. Caffeinated parent + room to scream and run around like a banshee for the kids? Win. 

Kepler’s Books
With its decades-long loyal followings by Beat Poets, musicians such as the Grateful Dead and Stanford professors, if there is an independent bookstore worthy of the title “Powerhouse” Kepler’s Books in Menlo Park is it. Kepler’s draws very popular author/illustrators for events (such as Rick Riordan); check their website for latest events.

1010 El Camino Real
Menlo Park

Hours: Sun.-Mon.,10 a.m.– 5 p.m., Tues.-Sat., 10 a.m.-7 p.m.
Online: keplers.com

Insider tip: The fantastic Café Borrone next door has lovely pastries among lunch and dinner options with outdoor seating next to a landmark fountain.  Nearby Burgess Park offers a large and shady playground for strolling and picnicking with the bonus of watching the train roll by. 

South Bay

Anna F. via Yelp

Hicklebee’s
Ask any savvy Bay Area parent what the best bookshop in the South Bay is, and you’ll likely get a resounding answer: Hicklebee’s. Serving Silicon Valley since 1979, families attest to its exemplary staff, wide selection of books and killer author events (JK Rowling, Rosemary Wells, Judith Viorist). With bonus features like Book of the Month Clubs (you can give as a gift!), their motto of "Extraordinary books for the entire family" is easier than ever to accomplish. 

1378 Lincoln Ave.
San Jose

Hours: Tues. – Fri., 11 a.m.–5 p.m.; Sat. 10 a.m.–5 p.m.; Sun. 11 a.m.–5 p.m.; closed Mondays
Online: hicklebees.com 

Books Inc.
With origins dating back to the Gold Rush, Books Inc. declares it is the oldest bookseller in the West. To be fair, there are nine different locations of this glorious indie-chain, including four in San Francisco, and two in the East Bay. We’re putting it under the South Bay heading but there are also Peninsula and SF stores.  All locations are clean, well-organized and feature an in-store children’s lit expert.  Check the website for the nearest location and join one of the many book clubs they host, or just pop in to peruse some of the finest selections of books in the Bay.

317 Castro St.
Mountain View

Hours: 10 a.m.- 9 p.m. daily

855 El Camino Real #74
Palo Alto

Hours: 9 a.m.-9 p.m. daily 
Online: booksinc.net

Recycle Bookstore
Books that are old to others and new to you line the shelves of this bookstore with locations on The Alameda and in downtown Campbell. Sell and trade your old books here or buy some new reads. The Campbell location always has a table out front with many fun kid favorites to lure in the little literature lovers.

1066 The Alameda
San Jose

Hours: 11 a.m. - 8 p.m. daily 

275 E. Campbell Ave.
Campbell

Hours: Tues.-Sat., 11 a.m.- 8 p.m.; Mon., 11 a.m.-5 p.m.; closed Sundays 
Online: recyclebookstore.com

Insider tip: Greenlee's Bakery with their famous cinnamon swirl bread is right across the street from the San Jose location. Or head to Campbell on Sunday to enjoy the farmer's market that takes over the downtown while you swing by to see what's new at Recycle.

Marin

Minty B via Yelp

Book Passage
The Bay Area’s liveliest bookstore is the premier location for author events, with the likes of Elizabeth Gilbert, Isabelle Allende, Hillary Clinton and Michael Chabon gracing its reading room or Ferry Building locations. The back of the main store includes children’s books, toys, and an entire used book room. Book Passage's store in the snazzy Ferry Building in San Francisco may have a small footprint, but boasts floor-to-ceiling books with a great kids’ section. It’s a perfect place to snag San Francisco-centric gift books like Count to Sleep San Francisco and Smarty Marty’s Got Game. Plus you can watch ferries, tankers and sail boats come and go, so it’s an epic win for the family.

51 Tamal Vista Blvd.
Corte Madera

Hours: 10 a.m. - 5p.m. daily
Online: bookpassage.com

Book Passage Ferry Building
1 Ferry Building
San Francisco

Hours: Mon.– Fri. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Sat. 9 a.m.–5 p.m.; Sun. 11 a.m.–5 p.m.
Online: bookpassage.com

Copperfield’s Books

With eleven stores ranging from Healdsburg to Larkspur, Copperfield’s has the North Bay and Marin well covered. Located in the 4th Street shopping district of downtown San Rafael, this location carries an expansive selection of books for kids and teens. The store also houses a Taylor Maid Organic Coffee Bar, because nothing goes better with a book than a cup of joe. 

850 4th St.
San Rafael

Hours: Mon. -Sat., 10 a.m. - 6 p.m.: Sun.,  10 a.m. - 5 p.m.
Online: copperfieldsbooks.com                                                  

Depot Book Store and Cafe
All aboard to get your board books! How fun is it that this popular bookstore is located in an old train depot? This adorable downtown Mill Valley shop is small yet offers an amazing kids’ selection. You'll enjoy the impressive array of both international and local magazines, and a cafe to boot!

87 Throckmorton Ave.
Mill Valley

Hours: Sun.-Tues, 8:30 a.m.- 7p.m.; Wed.-Thurs., 8:30 a.m. - 6 p.m.; Fri.- Sat., 8:30 a.m. - 7 p.m.
Online: depotbookstore.com

—Christine Lai & Kate Loweth

featured photo: iStock

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Watch out world, Barbie is vlogging and she has a lot to say. Through short videos on YouTube, she is giving fans a look inside her world and she tries to educate them along the way. In her latest episode, Barbie invites her friend Nikki to have a discussion on racism. 

Barbie is using her platform to raise awareness around racism and encourage girls to stand up if they see a person treated unfairly. The format of the episode consists of Barbie’s friend Nikki talking about the racism she has personally felt and share some stories that may resonate with other girls.

The goal of the episode is to help girls to understand that there is a huge movement going on in the fight against racism, why people are marching together and the importance of reading and learning more about Black history. Barbie is championing gender equality to help close the racial injustice barrier girls face through the Dream Gap and this is one way the brand is addressing it.  

Barbie shares, “It’s important to have ongoing conversations about standing up to racism, so I invited my good friend Nikki to join the vlog to share her experiences about when she has been treated unfairly. I am grateful for her honesty and friendship. To be a good friend, it’s important to listen, to understand, and to notice when bad things are happening to other people and to do something to help stop it. I hope that after hearing from Nikki, you too, will be inspired to continue taking a stand against racism.

—Jennifer Swartvagher

Featured photo: Mattel 

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October 11 is International Day of the Girl, a day dedicated to raising awareness of the need for girls’ rights. It’s also the perfect opportunity to teach your kids —boys and girls—about the importance of gender equality and girls’ rights around the world. Not sure how to show your girl power? Plan International USA made it easy for your family to support girls worldwide with its Girl Unlocked Campaign.

Plan International USA is a nonprofit organization that strives to advance children’s rights and equality for girls. They do this by engaging people and communities to make vital changes and tackle the root causes of discrimination against girls, exclusion and vulnerability. This year’s International Day of the Girl is more important than ever with a global pandemic affecting girls in so many ways.

Plan International USA wants your family show support for girls and young women as they push through doors and unlock their power and potential by decorating your front door in honor of International Day of the Girl. Participating is super easy. Here’s what you do!

1. Decorate your front door with equal signs and bold messages about gender equality. Think images of strong women, hearts, stars—anything that showcases messages and symbols of equity and girl empowerment. You can get as colorful and creative as you want and can find some ideas here!

2. While you decorate, use this opportunity to talk to your kids about equality, girls’ rights and empowerment.

3. Work on this fun activity anytime!

4. Share a photo of your front door on social media along with the hashtag #GirlUnlocked and tag @PlanUSA on Facebook and Twitter, and @Plan_USA on Instagram. In your post, include a brief message in your post about your family’s hopes for the next generation of girls.

This project is an awesome way for families to come together—in a pandemic-friendly way—and express their creativity through messages of girl power and equality to support girls around the world.

Plan International USA also hosted more activities in support of the International Day of the Girl, including their signature Girl Takeovers, where girls assume leadership roles in major corporations, governments, and nonprofits for the day, and female-led online workshops. You can check out the ​Freedom Online​ Report, sign a letter to make sure girls’ voices are heard, and visit the Unlock the Vote hub to learn about important girls’ rights issues before Election Day and how Plan has joined forces with theSkimm to help drive voting and bring attention to key issues.

Join in supporting Girl Unlocked today and share your creation using #GirlUnlocked! Learn more about Plan International USA.

—Leah R. Singer

Girl Up, the gender equality initiative of the United Nations Foundation, is hosting its 2020 virtual leadership summit online on Jul. 13-15, 2020. Former First Lady Michelle Obama will kick off its annual leadership conference with a special message for young female leaders and gender equality activists around the world. Special guests and speakers include Meghan Markle, Nadia Murad and Chloe x Halle.

women standing near water

Mrs. Obama, a champion of girls’ education, will share a special message  on behalf of the Obama Foundation’s Girls Opportunity Alliance, a program that seeks to empower adolescent girls around the world through education, enabling them to achieve their full potential and transform their families, communities, and countries. Girl Up and the Girls Opportunity Alliance have worked together in the past to promote grassroots and girl-led actions, and to mobilize their networks in support of girls’ education. Access to education is a human right, and girls’ access to quality education is essential to achieve gender equality and create an equitable world.

“We’re honored to have Mrs. Obama with us at our Summit this year. The impact she has made in this country, and around the world, is deeply inspiring and motivating to our girl leaders –she’s a role model for using your voice,” said Melissa Kilby, Executive Director of Girl Up.

This year’s Summit, presented by P&G, is themed “We Need To Talk,” pushing conversations about issues intersecting with gender equality, like representation in STEM and sports, access to education, and how to create solutions for gender-based violence.

Also joining Mrs. Obama as part of the Girl Up Leadership Summit speaker line-up:

Nadia Murad, 2018 Nobel Peace Laureate, UN Goodwill Ambassador, and Founder and President of Nadia’s Initiative

Sheryl Sandberg, COO Facebook and Founder of LeanIn.Org and OptionB.Org

Storm Reid, Actress and Activist

Dr. Tererai Trent, Global Humanitarian, Author, Scholar and Educator

Monique Coleman, Emmy Nominated Host, Actress, Champion for Young People

Liz Plank, Author, Activist and Journalist

Wade Davis, Thought Leader, Writer, Educator on Gender, Race, and Orientation Equality

More speakers will be announced in coming weeks. The in-person version of Girl Up’s flagship Leadership Summit in the nation’s capital has brought together more than 3,000 young activists to learn the issues and advocate Congress in recent years. Girl Up expects thousands more to join this year’s Summit in an online setting. Registration is free and is open until July 13, 2020.

—Jennifer Swartvagher

Featured photo: @thiszun from Pexels

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