Women in Science: 50 Fearless Pioneers Who Changed the World
Women in Science: 50 Fearless Pioneers Who Changed the World book cover

Women in Science: 50 Fearless Pioneers Who Changed the World

Hardcover – July 26, 2016

Price
$13.99
Format
Hardcover
Pages
128
Publisher
Ten Speed Press
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1607749769
Dimensions
7.8 x 0.6 x 9.3 inches
Weight
1.29 pounds

Description

“This charming encyclopedia includes a page of text and a fanciful drawing of the women scientists you’ve heard of—and plenty who you haven’t! The book has good coverage of the 1800s and early 1900s—a critical time when women’s expanding participation in science was changing the very structure of how knowledge is pursued. . . . Ignotofsky’s profiles of diverse female scientists is a great addition to the shelf of any student, of any age.” —Hope Jahren, FADER magazine “With the help of eye-catching artwork, Ignotofsky celebrates not just astronauts, but also the engineers, biologists, mathematicians, and physicists who’ve blazed a trail for women in STEM. . . . The book elevatesxa0this information with beautiful and instructive infographics that delve into topics like the number of women currently working in STEM fields.” — Entertainment Weekly “This book of illustrated biographies of scientific pioneers is hands-down gorgeous. . . . Kids will love paging through this, looking at all the detailed drawings, but they’ll likely have to rip it out of the hands of the adults who are marveling at each new page of factoids.” — Bitch Media “The world needs more books like this.” — Scientific American “A clever introduction to women scientists through history.” — Science Friday (Best Science Books of the Year) “If there were constellations celebrating the incredible accomplishments of women in science, Rachel Ignotofsky’s illustrations would serve as the blueprints. As Ignotofsky floatsxa0NASA computer programmer and mathematician Annie Easley amid rockets and stars, surrounds Higgs boson discoverer Sau Lan Wu with particles, and cradles Barbara McClintock with corn and chromosomes, she anchors her dreamy depictions into our brains. Women in Science captures the joy of so many essential discoveries while also celebrating the extraordinary lives of the women who’ve achieved them.” —Rachel Swaby, author of Headstrong: 52 Women Who Changed Science—and the World “I wish I had a daughter so I could give her a copy of Rachel Ignotofsky's lovingly illustrated Women in Science . In addition to Marie Curie, Rosalind Franklin, and Ada Lovelace, the book profiles dozens of less familiar female scientists—Black, Asian, Jewish, Russian, French, in stylish dresses, lab coats, trousers, spacesuits, shorts—whose accomplishments in astronomy, physics, mathematics, biology, psychology, and computer science came as news even to me. Ignotofsky provides young women with the courage and confidence to follow the exciting paths these pioneers have blazed before them.” —Eileen Pollack, author of The Only Woman in the Room: Why Science Is Still a Boys' Club “In Rachel Ignotofsky’s edifying and inspiringxa0bookxa0we meet some of history’s mostxa0remarkable women. Each profile contains extraordinary stories of obstacles and achievements. The drawings float on the pages’ dark backgrounds, making each figure appear to hover in the sky like a constellation. That’s what the reader is doing in this book: stargazing.” —Lauren Redniss, author of Radioactive and Thunder & Lightning Rachel Ignotofsky is a New York Times bestselling author, illustrator, and designer. Rachel and her work have been featured in many print and online media outlets such as the New York Times , Los Angeles Times , Scientific American , Science Friday , Brain Pickings , and more. She is the author of Women in Science , Women in Sports , Women in Art, I Love Science , and The Wondrous Workings of Planet Earth .xa0She is a graduate of Tyler School of Art’s graphic design program. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. INTRODUCTIONNothing says trouble like a woman in pants. That was the attitude in the 1930s, anyway; when Barbara McClintock wore slacks at the University of Missouri, it was considered scandalous. Even worse, she was feisty, direct, incredibly smart, and twice as sharp as most of her male colleagues. She did things her way to get the best results, even if it meant working late with her students, who were breaking curfew. If you think these seem like good qualities for scientist, then you are right. But back then, these weren’t necessarily considered good qualities in a woman. Her intelligence, her self-confidence, her willingness to break rules, and of course her pants were all considered shocking!Barbara had already made her mark on the field of genetics with her groundbreaking work at Cornell University, mapping chromosomes using corn. This work is still important in scientific history. Yet while working at the University of Missouri Barbara was seen as bold and unladylike. The faculty excluded her from meetings and gave her little support with her research. When she found out they would fire her if she got married and there was no possibility of promotion, she decided she had had enough.Risking her entire career, she packed her bags. With no plan, except an unwillingness to compromise her worth, Barbara went off to find her dream job. This decision would allow her to joyously research all day and eventually make the discovery of jumping genes. This discovery would win her a Nobel Prize and forever change how we view genetics.Barbara McClintock’s story is not unique. As long as humanity has asked questions about our world, men and women have looked to the stars, under rocks, and through microscopes to find the answers. Although both men and women have the same thirst for knowledge, women have not always been given the same opportunities to explore the answers.In the past, restrictions on women’s access to education was not uncommon. Women were often not allowed to publish scientific papers. Women were expected to grow up to exclusively become good wives and mothers while their husbands provided for them. Many peoplexa0thought women were just not as smart as men. The women in this book had to fight these stereotypes to have the careers they wanted. They broke rules, published under pseudonyms, and worked for the love of learning alone. When others doubted their abilities, they had to believe in themselves.When women finally began gaining wider access to higher education, there was usually a catch. Often they would be given no space to work, no funding, and no recognition. Not allowed to enter the university building because of her gender, Lise Meitner did her radiochemistry experiments in a dank basement. Without funding for a lab, physicist and chemist Marie Curie handled dangerous radioactive elements in a tiny, dusty shed. After making one of the most important discoveries in the history of astronomy, Cecilia Payne-Gaposchkin still got little recognition, and for decades her gender limited her to work as a technical assistant. Creativity, persistence, and a love of discovery were the greatest tools these women had.Marie Curie is now a household name, but throughout history there have been many other great and important women in the fields of science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM). Many did not receive the recognition they deserved at the time and were forgotten. When thinking of physics, we should name not only Albert Einstein but also the genius mathematician Emmy Noether. We should all know that it was Rosalind Franklin who discovered the double helix structure of DNA, not James Watson and Francis Crick. While admiring the advances in computer technology, let us remember not only Steve Jobs or Bill Gates, but also Grace Hopper, the creator of modern programming.Throughout history many women have risked everything in the name of science. This book tells the stories of these scientists, from ancient Greece to the modern day, who in the face of “No” said, “Try and stop me.” Read more

Features & Highlights

  • NEW YORK TIMES
  • BESTSELLER • This “wittily illustrated [and] accessible volume” (
  • The Wall Street Journal
  • ) highlights the contributions of fifty notable women to the fields of science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) from the ancient to the modern world.
  • “The must-read, girl-power STEM book.”
  • —InStyle
  • It’s a scientific fact: Women rock!
  • This fascinating, educational collection features 50 illustrated portraits of trailblazing women in STEM throughout history.
  • Full of striking, singular art,
  • Women in Science
  • also contains infographics about relevant topics such as lab equipment, rates of women currently working in STEM fields, and an illustrated scientific glossary. The trailblazing women profiled include such pioneers as primatologist Jane Goodall and mathematician Katherine Johnson, who calculated the trajectory of the 1969 Apollo 11 mission to the moon.
  • Women in Science
  • celebrates the achievements of the intrepid women who have paved the way for the next generation of female engineers, biologists, mathematicians, doctors, astronauts, physicists, and more!

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(3.8K)
★★★★
25%
(1.6K)
★★★
15%
(950)
★★
7%
(443)
-7%
(-444)

Most Helpful Reviews

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An A+ idea, but C+ execution

Praise goes to Rachel Ignotofsky for assembling these tributes to important women in science. There is much that is good about the book and its biographies, but many aspects of the design detract from its message. The fanciful caricatures become monotonous after awhile. The interesting facts sprinkled around the ‘portraits’ and in the margins are a distraction from the main articles that are difficult to read anyway owing to the small print. The science is occasionally oversimplified into serious inaccuracy.

Many of the definitions in the glossary are misleading and incomplete, wrong, or introduce terms incorrectly, sometimes not otherwise defined; some seem to be partially extracted from wikipedia without a full understanding of the science. So let the reader beware.
213 people found this helpful
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My 4 year old daughter loves it

I read a different segment to my 4 year old daughter every night and follow up with a photo of the person we just discussed on my phone along with the wiki article. She loves it and looks forward to it each and every evening before bed. She wants to be a scientist when she grows up. We need more books like this in our society so more of our little girls grow up loving math and science! Great pick - highly recommended.
82 people found this helpful
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Terrible quality control on book production.

Seems to be a great book, BUT ours was printed backwards in the book and had words cut off from pages.
65 people found this helpful
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A wonderful present

This is an absolutely fantastic book! I got it as a present for a toy drive for a pre-teen girl and I am thinking of getting one for all the women and girls I know of all ages. The artwork is wonderful and the information is presented concisely but entertainingly. It's not an encyclopedia with an extremely detailed outline of each experiment conducted by each woman, but the information is fascinating and can inspire a young mind to investigate further.
58 people found this helpful
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Great book! Got the Sports one too.

We have been building a collection of female empowering books for our 7 year old. Amoung our favorites is this one. I even bought a copy for her 2nd grade teacher to have in the classroom.
Some others in our collection include:
-“Women in Sports: 50 Fearless Athletes Who Played to Win”
-“Good Night Stories for Rebel Girls”
-“Good Night Stories for Rebel Girls 2”
-“Ruth Bader Ginsburg: The Case of R.B.G. vs. Inequality”
-“Why We March: Signs of Protest and Hope--Voices from the Women's March” (we marched in DC so she loved having this book)
-“The Pink Hat”
54 people found this helpful
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Should be called "Mostly White Women in Science"

Extremely light in the contributions of women of color, specifically black women in science. It would be very difficult to share this book with black children as it would just reinforce an erroneous idea that black girls have little reason to pursue careers in STEM. A follow-up volume highlighting the contributions of black women in STEM would be great, if there isn't one already in production. Only that would complete the story of women in science.
27 people found this helpful
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Standing atop the shoulders of so many "giants"

I read this book in combination with Catherine Thimmesh's Girls Think of Everything, regretting that civilization has not as yet reached a point when achievements no longer need be identified as gender-specific. Be that as it may, both books provide valuable information and insights about creative thinking.

Rachel Ignotofsky focuses on 50 "fearless pioneers" during a time frame that extends from Hypatia (350-370 CE-415 CE [?]) until Maryam Mirzakhani (1977-2017). Women in the United States were not permitted to vote until 1920 and access to higher education was denied -- or at least severely limited -- to women who wanted to pursue a degree in medicine or in the STEM fields: science, technology, engineering, and mathematics. Moreover, resistance to women's personal growth and professional development has been even wider and deeper in most other countries.

These are among the mini-profiles of "fearless pioneers" that are of greatest interest and value to me:

o Ada Lovelace (1815-1852): Mathematician,; collaborator with Charles Babbage on first computer program
o Elizabeth Blackwell (1821-1910): Physician; founder of several medical societies in U.S. and England
o Alice Ball (1892-1916): Chemist; developed a new treatment of leprosy victims throughout the world
o Marie Curie (1867-1934): Physicist and chemist; Nobel laureate (twice)
o Barbara McClintock (1902-1992): Cytogeneticist; revised views of evolution and botany; Nobel laureate
o Grace Hopper (1906-1992): Navy admiral and computer scientist; invented first compiler
o Rachel Carson (1907-1964): Marine biologist and conservationist; author of the Silent Spring
o Hedy Lamarr (1914-2000): Inventor and film actress; developed frequency-hopping spread system (FHSS) used in smartphones, GPS, Wi-Fi, and Bluetooth devices
o Katherine Johnson (1918- ): Physicist and mathematician calculated trajectories for NASA; featured in the book and film, Hidden Figures
o Jane Goodall (1934- ): Primatologist, ethologist, and anthropologist; renowned for research on chimpanzees
o Valentina Tereshkova (1937- ): Engineer and Cosmonaut; first woman to travel in outer space; orbited Earth 48 times in Vostok VI
o Elizabeth Blackburn (1948- ): Molecular biologist; invented telomarase (enzyme that builds telomeres); Nobel Laureate
o Maye Jemison (1956- ): Astronaut, educator, and physician; first African-American woman in outer space; founder and CEO of several corporations

Rachel Ignotofsky concludes, "The women in this book prove to the world that no matter your gender, your race, or your background, anyone can achieve great things. Their legacy lives on. Today, women all over the world are still risking everything to discover and explore.

"Let us celebrate these trailblazers so we can inspire the next generation. Together, we can pick up where they left off, and continue the search for knowledge.

"So go out and tackle new problems, find your answers, and learn everything you can to make your own discoveries!"

That is her challenge to the young women who read this book but it is also a challenge to others -- parents, other family members, teachers, coaches, and clergy -- who can support their efforts. I also urge those young women to keep in mind this valuable insight from Eleanor Roosevelt: "No one can make you feel inferior without your consent."
23 people found this helpful
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So sorry I bought this for my 8 year old ...

So sorry I bought this for my 8 year old granddaughter on my daughter's recommendation. I thought it was about famous women in history but never dreamed it would be discussing penis envy.
22 people found this helpful
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Subtly Political

The first story unnecessarily bashed extremist Christians and the "unenlightened" by pointing out that that woman was killed by them. While extremist anyone's tend to be villains, bringing them into a children's book where they aren't needed lowered my opinion of the content.

I love the idea of promoting positive female role models, but have little patience for even subtle political agenda-pushing.

Beyond that, I'd like to decide when and how to address complex issues like that with my child--I don't want it jumping up and interfering with conversations about awesome things some really cool women did. In this case, I just wanted an inspirational book for my daughter.
22 people found this helpful
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Femnist nonsense

This book is a rewriting of history in some cases for example this book credits lise meitner with the discovery of nuclear fission when it was otto hahn who discovered it. It credits ada lovelace with the analytical machine when it was Charles Babbage, and credits hedy lamarr with wifi technology when Nikola tesla and George antheil were first to discover wifi. And Alan Turing was building computer programs before grace hopper was even born.
22 people found this helpful