- I ran into some trouble, Peggy Caserta and Maggie Falcon
- The first survivors of Alzheimer's, how patients recovered life and hope in their own words, Dale E. Bredesen M.D
- Different kinds of minds, a guide to your brain, Temple Grandin with Ann D. Koffsky
- ¡Ay, Mija!, my bilingual summer in Mexico, Christine Suggs
- The enigma girls, how ten teenagers broke ciphers, kept secrets, and helped win World War II, Candace Fleming
- Memoirs of a man in pajamas, Paco Roca ; translated by Andrea Rosenberg
- I must be dreaming, Roz Chast
- Freddie the flyer, written by Fred Carmichael and Danielle Metcalfe-Chenail ; illustrated by Audrea Loreen-Wulf
- Ten days in a mad-house, written by Brad Ricca ; illustrated by Courtney Sieh ; adapted from the work of Nellie Bly
- Dear world, a Syrian girl's story of war and plea for peace, Bana al Abed
- Rock 'n' roll, written by Daniel Grogan ; illustrated by Nichola Cowdery
- Lovers in Auschwitz, a true story, Keren Blankfeld
- Drum from the heart, author, Ren Louie ; illustrator, Karlene Harvey
- Good night stories for rebel girls, 100 inspiring young changemakers, editors, Jess Harriton and Maithy Vu
- No horses in the house!, the audacious life of artist Rosa Bonheur, story by Mireille Messier ; illustrations by Anna Bron
- Gaytheist, coming out of my Orthodox childhood, Lonnie Mann ; art by Lonnie Mann and Ryan Gatts
- Black Canadians in sports, by Brian D'Souza
- She can STEM, 50 trailblazing women in science from ancient history to today, Liz Lee Heinecke
- Real princesses change the world, Carrie A. Pearson ; illustrated by Dung Ho
- The little books of the little Brontës, Sara O'Leary & Briony May Smith
- My dear nuakuluapik, written by Irene Jonas ; illustrated by Tindur Peturs
- Stand up!, ten mighty women who made a change, by Brittney Cooper ; illustrated by Cathy Ann Johnson
- Mexikid, a graphic memoir, by Pedro Martín
- The best of me, David Sedaris
- Finding my dance, by Ria Thundercloud ; illustrated by Kalila J. Fuller
- Basketball dreams, Chris Paul ; illustrated by Courtney Lovett
- The girl who fought back, Vladka Meed and the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, Joshua M. Greene
- The forest keeper, the true story of Jadav Payeng, by Rina Singh ; illustrated by Ishita Jain
- Dotson, my journey growing up transgender, Grayson Lee White ; illustrations by Stephanie Roth Sisson
- Puzzled, a memoir of growing up with OCD, Pan Cooke
- The diary keepers, World War II in the Netherlands, as written by the people who lived through it, Nina Siegal
- One million trees, a true story, Kristen Balouch
- Button pusher, Tyler Page
- Enough already, learning to love the way I am today, Valerie Bertinelli
- Homeland, my father dreams of Palestine, by Hannah Moushabeck ; illustrated by Reem Madooh
- Take the long way home, by Jon Claytor
- You can't say that!, writers for young people talk about censorship, free expression, and the stories they have to tell, compiled and edited by Leonard S. Marcus ; with a new foreword by LeVar Burton
- How to talk so people will listen!, (and sound confident even when you're not!), Lizzie Waterworth
- The light of days, the untold story of women resistance fighters in Hitler's ghettos, Judith Batalion
- Transitions, a mother's journey, Élodie Durand ; translated by Evan McGorray
- Je ne sais quoi, the adventures of a French woman in London, by Lucie Arnoux
- There was a party for Langston, by Jason Reynolds ; with art by Jerome Pumphrey & Jarrett Pumphrey
- This country, searching for home in (very) rural America, Navied Mahdavian
- Ancient civilizations, women who made a difference, by Lori McManus
- Whatever it took, an American paratrooper's extraordinary memoir of escape, survival, and heroism in the last days of World War II, Henry Langrehr and Jim DeFelice
- Michael Rosen's Sticky McStickstick, the friend who helped me walk again, Michael Rosen ; illustrated by Tony Ross
- If you traveled on the Underground Railroad, written by Ebony Joy Wilkins ; illustrated by Steffi Walthall
- Portrait of a body, Julie Delporte ; translated by Helge Dascher and Karen Houle
- Bertha Parker, the first indigenous American woman archaeologist, by Mari Bolte
- See it, dream it, do it, how 25 people just like you found their dream jobs, Colleen Nelson & Kathie MacIsaac ; with illustrations by Scot Ritchie