As a digital subscriber, you’ll receive unlimited access to Horn Book web exclusives and extensive archives, as well as access to our highly searchable Guide/Reviews Database.
To access other site content, visit The Horn Book homepage.
To continue you need an active subscription to hbook.com.
Subscribe now to gain immediate access to everything hbook.com has to offer, as well as our highly searchable Guide/Reviews Database, which contains tens of thousands of short, critical reviews of books published in the United States for young people.
Thank you for registering. To have the latest stories delivered to your inbox, select as many free newsletters as you like below.
No thanks. Return to article
(2)
K-3
Illustrated by
Aimée Sicuro.
Like many astronomers (think Edwin Hubble, for example), Vera Rubin (1928–2016) showed a youthful passion for this branch of science. But, unlike them, she had a huge barrier that stalled her professional advancement, that of gender bias. Nickel makes Rubin's situation clear through telling episodes (there was no restroom for women at Palomar Observatory, for example) and multiple astronomical similes (Rubin "felt like a faraway star on the edge of their universe"). Despite the many barriers, Rubin persevered and became the astronomer responsible for documenting dark matter--a mass invisible without a spectrometer and only discernible by studying its effect on stars within galaxies. Nickel's descriptions of dark matter--which accounts for about eighty percent, and therefore most, of the universe--and Rubin's process of calculating it are quite straightforward and accessible. Whether representing Rubin's thoughts or a winter snowstorm, striking watercolors repeat concentric circles and curves, suggesting images of swirling galaxies, the very subject that prompts Rubin's work. Sicuro solves the problem of depicting dark matter by gloriously representing it as if seen through a spectrometer, like "glitter caught in an invisible halo." Appended with an author's note, documentation of direct quotes, a timeline of Rubin's life, and a bibliography.
Reviewer: Betty Carter
| Horn Book Magazine Issue:
March, 2021