This is most definitely a book to be read by your daughters and your sons and one which is sure to inspire a future generation of 'Women In Science'.
The Bookbag
<p>Readers will find a wide variety of nationalities, ethnic backgrounds, orientations and social classes. Girls will find someone who looks like them. Hooray! And it's not just a selection of the usual suspects either - Marie Curie is here, yes, but so are less famous women who were and are no less pioneering and brilliant. ...<br />... and you know, <i>Women in Science</i> is also beautiful. Ignofotsky is a graphic designer and she has produced here not just beautiful illustrations that draw the eye and persuade it to linger, but also a great density of information distilled into nuggets of wonderful clarity. I could look at this book for hours. I wish I could have owned it as a child because I just know I would have returned to it over and over again.<br />Highly, highly recommended.</p>
The Bookbag
A fascinating and superbly presented book
Parents In Touch
I am in love with this book ... all girls should have a copy
Waterstones.com
Gorgeously illustrated ... Ignotofsky introduces us to a succession of extraordinary individuals
Teach Primary
A wonderful celebration of pioneering female scientists ... truly inspirational
South Wales Evening Post
A wonderful celebration of the achievements of the intrepid women from both the ancient and the modern worlds ... Inspiring and informative
Surrey Advertiser
Thoroughly inspiring and informative: a must for every child
Book Trust
<i>Women in Science </i>- what an absolutely beautiful AND brilliant book!
Cherry Healey
A stunning book celebrating the contributions of 50 trailblazing women.
Little London
The history of science is full of the achievements of women scientists and they are celebrated in this fascinating book which will be an inspiration to all young people looking to a career in science - and will hopefully encourage those who still feel science is a man's world.
Parents In Touch
One of the attractions of this book is the sheer variety of women represented. It is inspirational for any young child to see the contribution of female talent to so many significant scientific advances.
The Carousel
This is a treasury of fascinating information beautifully illustrated. A book that will inspire future generations of women scientists, the secret to success remains the same, "creativity, persistence and a love of discovery were the greatest tools these women had.
Royal Society
With short, inspiring stories and the accessibility of a graphic novel, <i>Women in Science: 50 Fearless Pioneers Who Changed The World</i> is the perfect book to share with the science- and tech-minded people (male and female, young and old) in your life ... The must-read, girl-power STEM book.
InStyle.com
The book is a beautifully curated collection of personal narratives from female scientists from a wide variety of backgrounds and disciplines, with a dash of whimsy thrown in.
Upworthy
If there were constellations celebrating the incredible accomplishments of women in science, Rachel Ignotofsky's illustrations would serve as the blueprints. <i>Women in Science </i>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,
Though the number of women working in Science, Technology, Engineering and Manufacture (STEM) is slowly on the increase, there is still a huge abscence of women pursuing jobs within the sector today. And that is exactly why young readers need a book like Women in Science! Ignotofsky explores a subject matter that is not only relevant but, in my opinion, essential for inspiring the next generation of female pioneers for the future. What I love most about the look and feel of this book is that it uses colorful infographics. It is, in no way, prissy or feminine. And with a real mixed bag of over fifty women discussed, with more mentioned at the back, you can't help but read it and think how great an addition it would be to any school library.
The School Librarian
A gloriously illustrated celebration of trailblazing women. Women in Science highlights the contributions of fifty notable women to the STEM fields of science, technology, engineering and mathematics, from both the ancient and modern worlds. The book also contains fascinating infographics and an illustrated scientific glossary.
The extraordinary women profiled include well-known figures like the physicist and chemist Marie Curie, as well as lesser-known pioneers such as Katherine Johnson, the African-American mathematician who calculated the trajectory of the 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 beyond ...
- 6: Introduction
- 8: Hypatia
- 10: Maria Sibylla Merian
- 12: Wang Zhenyi
- 14: Mary Anning
- 16: Ada Lovelace
- 18: Elizabeth Blackwell
- 20: Hertha Ayrton
- 22: Karen Horney
- 24: Nettie Stevens
- 26: Florence Bascom
- 28: Marie Curie
- 30: Mary Agnes Chase
- 32: Timeline
- 34: Lise Meitner
- 36: Lillian Gilbreth
- 38: Emmy Noether
- 40: Edith Clarke
- 42: Marjory Stoneman Douglas
- 44: Alice Ball
- 46: Gerty Cori
- 48: Joan Beauchamp Procter
- 50: Cecilia Payne-Gaposchkin
- 52: Barbara McClintock
- 54: Maria Goeppert-Mayer
- 56: Grace Hopper
- 58: Rachel Carson
- 60: Lab tools
- 62: Rita Levi-Montalcini
- 64: Dorothy Hodgkin
- 66: Chien-Shiung Wu
- 68: Hedy Lamarr
- 70: Mamie Phipps Clark
- 72: Gertrude Elion
- 74: Katherine Johnson
- 76: Jane Cooke Wright
- 78: Rosalind Franklin
- 80: Rosalyn Yalow
- 82: Esther Lederberg
- 84: Statistics in STEM
- 86: Vera Rubin
- 88: Annie Easley
- 90: Jane Goodall
- 92: Sylvia Earle
- 94: Valentina Tereshkova
- 96: Patricia Bath
- 98: Christiane Nusslein-Volhard
- 100: Jocelyn Bell Burnell
- 102: Sau Lan Wu
- 104: Elizabeth Blackburn
- 106: Katia Krafft
- 108: Mae Jemison
- 110: May-Britt Moser
- 112: Maryam Mirzakhani
- 114: More women in science
- 116: Conclusion
- 118: Glossary
- 120: Sources
- 122: Acknowledgements
- 124: About the author
- 126: Index