The Women of the Moon
Tales of Science, Love, Sorrow, and Courage
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- $22.99
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- $22.99
Publisher Description
Of the 1586 lunar craters that have been named to honor scientists and philosophers, only 28 honor a woman. Who were these women? This book recounts their exemplary lives and inspiring achievements. Along the way, the book explains some of the science, and provides interesting facts about the Moon.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Revealing that 1558 craters on the moon have been named for men, but only 28 for women, this valuable survey offers an illuminating perspective on the latter. Physicist Altschuler and astronomer Ballesteros share short, chronologically arranged, biographies of these women, beginning with Hypatia, a mathematician and astronomer born circa 355 C.E. Comet-hunter Caroline Herschel, born in 1750, was eclipsed by her brother William, discoverer of Uranus, yet for her own part discovered more comets than any other women until 1980. Other groundbreaking women active in the 19th century include Maria Mitchell, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences' first female member, and Harvard "computer" and pioneering astronomer Williamina Fleming. Chapters on astronomer Priscilla Fairfield Bok, nuclear physicist Lise Meitner, and mathematician Amalie Emmy Noether, all 20th-century figures, reveal brilliant women threatened by political as well as gender-based barriers. The biographies of four NASA crew members killed in space shuttle disasters Challenger's Judy Resnik and Christa McAuliffe and Columbia's Kalpana Chawla and Laurel Clark and of cosmonaut Valentina Tereshkova (the book's only still-living subject), close out the collection. The cumulative result of these neat but telling histories is a memorable introduction to 28 strong, smart, and too often forgotten female pioneers of science and exploration.