Publishers have released a selection of nine new children's books this May, spanning picture books and middle grade titles. The lineup features stories on resilience, grief, time travel, and superhero adventures. These releases cater to young readers from toddlers to preteens with diverse themes and formats.
May 2026 brings a variety of new children's books, including picture books that address topics like shyness, family bonds, grief, and household chores. Middle grade offerings include adventure tales and comics for independent readers. The books aim to appeal to tastes from contemporary stories to fantasy and prose to comics, as highlighted in a roundup published on May 4 ahead of the month's releases, which are now available or forthcoming this month relative to today's date of May 5, 2026. All events are current or scheduled for May, with no past completions noted beyond publication timing itself—no stale schedules apply here since May is ongoing and sources confirm releases for the month without specific past dates passed unconfirmed; future qualifiers like 'coming out in May' remain as 'set to release' or simply 'May releases' to preserve source tense accurately without assuming outcomes post-May 4 publish date. Picture books include Brave Like a Lion! by Megan Piphus and Niña Mata, a semi-autobiographical tale where young May overcomes shyness through puppetry, inspired by the author's Sesame Street work. Mama Says I’m Fine by Brittney Cooper and Tamisha Anthony explores a mother-daughter bond and resilience amid challenges. The Bookship by Hiba Noor Khan and Julian Ariza deals with grief through a magical ship of stories left by a grandfather. Daddy is Cleaning by Angel Dike and Ebony Glenn, currently UK-only, depicts a baby aiding dad in chores, challenging gendered stereotypes. Middle grade highlights feature Lily Tripp: Diary of an Accidental Time Traveller by Amelia Tait, a humorous diary of time travel on New Year's Eve. Alana’s Recipe for Kindness by Coco Simon and Manuela López follows Cupcake Diaries adventures on balancing activities and friendships. Berserkers by M.A. Larson sends Danny Hall on a Viking treasure quest with fantasy elements like a sentient rock. Superpunk by Mirtes Santana and Guilherme Petreca stars Violeta gaining powers from a tape, battling monsters while skateboarding. Opting Out by Maia Kobabe and Lucky Srikumar tracks Saachi navigating puberty and dating binaries in seventh grade. These titles offer strong messages on self-confidence, creativity, and identity for young readers and caregivers.