The Radium Girls: Young Readers' Edition: The Scary but True Story of the Poison that Made People Glow in the Dark

The Radium Girls: Young Readers' Edition: The Scary but True Story of the Poison that Made People Glow in the Dark

by Kate Moore

Narrated by Xe Sands

Unabridged — 6 hours, 45 minutes

The Radium Girls: Young Readers' Edition: The Scary but True Story of the Poison that Made People Glow in the Dark

The Radium Girls: Young Readers' Edition: The Scary but True Story of the Poison that Made People Glow in the Dark

by Kate Moore

Narrated by Xe Sands

Unabridged — 6 hours, 45 minutes

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Overview

Explore the unbelievable true story of America's glowing girls and their fight for justice in the young readers edition of the New York Times and USA Today bestseller The Radium Girls.



Amid the excitement of the early twentieth century, hundreds of young women spend their days hard at work painting watch dials with glow-in-the-dark radium paint. The painters consider themselves lucky-until they start suffering from a mysterious illness. As the corporations try to cover up a shocking secret, these shining girls suddenly find themselves at the center of a deadly scandal.



The Radium Girls: Young Readers Edition tells the unbelievable true story of these incredible women, whose determination to fight back saved countless lives.


Editorial Reviews

From the Publisher

"A fine, moving, important work for young readers. " — Kirkus Reviews, STARRED review

"Moore’s personal, captivating prose [renders] this shining piece of history unforgettable." — Booklist, STARRED Review

"An impeccably written young readers’ edition of an excellent work of history." — School Library Journal

"[A] lesson in corporate greed, bystander ignorance, and the power of perseverance that will inspire and educate all young revolutionaries." — The Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books

"This thrilling young readers’ edition is an essential purchase for all middle school and high school libraries." — Youth Services Book Review

"Gripping, heartbreaking, and deeply inspiring—very much worth reading." — The Children's Book Review

"Moore’s gripping account follows the women’s fight for justice amid overwhelming odds... best suited for more mature readers." — Kristin Chapman, World Magazine

"A 2020 A Mighty Girl Best Book of the Year" — A Mighty Girl

School Library Journal

05/01/2020

Gr 7 Up—This dense, meticulously researched book covers the courageous determination of young women who unknowingly poisoned themselves while doing their job. In 1917, the same year the United States entered World War I, dozens of young women, many of them teenagers from working-class families, took up positions at the Radium Luminous Materials Corporation in Newark, NJ. They painted watch dials with glow-in-the-dark paint made with radium. This element was still relatively new, and scientists were unaware of how dangerous it was. Moore offers a heartbreaking account of the pain and suffering many of the "radium girls" experienced. Doctors were mystified at their condition, and their employers refused to take responsibility, even discrediting the characters of the girls involved. Moore also explores the story of the women who worked at the Radium Dial Company in Ottawa, IL. Court cases dragged on for years, plagued by bureaucracy and the powerful corporations' determination to cover up any responsibility they had in the girls' illness. The author does a great job balancing the many court proceedings, reports, and individual profiles of those involved with compelling personal stories of the brave women who suffered the most. The size and depth of the text make this a suitable title for astute older readers. VERDICT An impeccably written but arguably unnecessary young readers' edition of an excellent work of history.—Kristy Pasquariello, Westwood Public Library, MA

Kirkus Reviews

★ 2020-05-17
Starting in 1916, young women in New Jersey were hired to paint the luminous dials of watches—with lethal consequences.

The young readers’ edition of The Radium Girls (2017) pulls no punches. As in the adult version, it describes in agonizing detail the diseases that destroyed the lives of young dial painters who were instructed to “lip point” their brushes with each dip of radium paint. They’d leave work literally glowing, having absorbed such a large quantity of the dangerous radioactive element that they’d been told was good for their health. Moore tracks more than a dozen of the girls through their extreme suffering as the radium loosened their teeth, destroyed their jaws, ate away their bones, and caused lethal tumors. Even after the deadly aftereffects were documented, another company opened a dial-painting studio in Illinois with a similar outcome. Although these young women’s lives often ended tragically early, their determination to achieve a legal victory against the negligent companies had lasting consequences: Both important laws that would protect future workers from unsafe employment practices and improve workers’ compensation laws and a better understanding of the medical outcomes of radioactivity exposure, which also helped end nuclear tests, resulted. The only discordant note in this sensitive presentation is a single unnecessary, pandering sentence: “Grace recalled that even her boogers became luminously green!”

A fine, moving, important work for young readers. (timeline, end notes, bibliography) (Nonfiction. 10-18)

Product Details

BN ID: 2940175632508
Publisher: Tantor Audio
Publication date: 05/17/2022
Edition description: Unabridged
Age Range: 8 - 11 Years
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