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ROSALIND LOOKED CLOSER by Lisa Gerin

ROSALIND LOOKED CLOSER

An Unsung Hero of Molecular Science

by Lisa Gerin ; illustrated by Chiara Fedele

Pub Date: Aug. 30th, 2022
ISBN: 978-1-5064-7065-8
Publisher: Beaming Books

Rosalind Franklin was frequently told that girls could not be scientists.

But, as this picture-book biography illustrates, she loved to learn and always knew that science was her calling. At boarding school, where she was the only Jewish child, she studied Hebrew and other languages while the other students attended church. She attended a London school where girls could learn science and math and later studied chemistry at Cambridge University. World War II loomed; on one page, Rosalind expresses relief that she lives in England—here, the book offers a brief, facile description of the Holocaust. Rosalind helped develop a safe gas mask for British soldiers during World War II. But examining and photographing the molecular structure of DNA led to her most important discovery, perfectly capturing the now-famous double helix. James Watson and Francis Crick, the male scientists who discovered DNA, used her remarkable photo to present their findings but never credited her. But she never stopped working and later photographed RNA in polio and other viruses. Though sometimes heavily reliant on difficult scientific vocabulary, Gerin is meticulous and admiring in presenting Rosalind’s accomplishments, placing them in the context of world events across several decades and stressing her subject’s intensity and patience despite many frustrations. At several stages readers are reminded that Rosalind “always took a closer look.” Fedele’s mostly earth-toned illustrations are carefully constructed to capture the times and settings and present Rosalind as strong and serious. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

A new generation is introduced to a fascinating woman of science whose story deserves to be more widely known.

(author’s note, glossary, timeline, bibliography) (Picture book/biography/history. 9-14)