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Overview

Marie Curie, the woman who coined the term radioactivity, won not just one Nobel Prize but two-in physics and chemistry, both supposedly girl-phobic sciences.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781094089386
Publisher: Blackstone Publishing
Publication date: 05/12/2020
Series: Giants of Science Series , #4
Product dimensions: 5.60(w) x 5.80(h) x 0.60(d)
Age Range: 10 - 13 Years

About the Author

Kathleen Krull’s Giants of Science books are recognized as a unique series in which biography, social history, and scientific discoveries blend together into compellingly readable books for older readers. The books in the Giants of Science series—Leonardo da Vinci, Isaac Newton, Sigmund Freud, Marie Curie, Albert Einstein, Charles Darwin, and Benjamin Franklin—have garnered a galaxy of starred book reviews. Kathleen Krull lives in San Diego, California. Visit her at KathleenKrull.com.


Tavia Gilbert is an acclaimed narrator of more than four hundred full-cast and multivoice audiobooks for virtually every publisher in the industry. Named the 2018 Voice of Choice by Booklist magazine, she is also winner of the prestigious Audie Award for best narration. She has earned numerous Earphones Awards, a Voice Arts Award, and a Listen-Up Award. Audible.com has named her a Genre-Defining Narrator: Master of Memoir. In addition to voice acting, she is an accomplished producer, singer, and theater actor. She is also a producer, singer, photographer, and a writer, as well as the cofounder of a feminist publishing company, Animal Mineral.

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

Krull presents another top-notch scientific biography in the outstanding Giants of Science series. Readers have come to expect chatty, direct narratives that develop distinct characters and place those individuals squarely in the context of both their times and their disciplines, and this account of the noted physicist’s life delivers the goods. From her childhood in an oppressed Poland, the daughter of two highly educated individuals, Curie emerges as a driven woman, determined to excel for both her parents’ and her country’s sake, this drive informing everything that followed. As in previous series entries, this offering manages to take a wildly complex subject—atomic physics—and render it comprehensible to the child reader, emphasizing the legacy Curie left behind. Curie’s personal life—her unusual (for the times) partnership with her husband, her frustration with the limitations imposed on her because of her sex, her difficulty balancing work and family—receives admiring, but frank consideration. Readers will emerge from this account with a new appreciation for both the scientific and social advances made by Curie, whose towering achievements justly earn her a place among the “Giants.”—Kirkus, starred review

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