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C**N
Great book for Smart Girls
The 8 year old recipient LOVED this book and so did her parents! Perfect role model book.
R**S
An entertaining as well as informative celebration of ingenuity
I read this book in combination with Rachel Ignotofsky's Women in Science, regretting that civilization has not as yet advanced a point when achievements no longer need be identified as gender-specific. Be that as it may, both books provide valuable information and insights about creative thinking.Catherine Thimmesh's coverage covers a timeframe from 3000 BC when fourteen-year-old Hsi-ling-shi develops a method of gathering and weaving silk until 1994 when eleven-year-old Alexia Arnold designs the Ooops! Proof No-Spill Feeding Bowl.In between, we learn about other women -- often teenage -- who come up with ideas that also illustrate the prescience of these comments by Francea Hodgson Burnett: "At first people refuse to believe that a strange new thing can be done, then they begin to hope it can be done, then they see it can be done -- then it is done and all the world wonders why it was not done centuries ago." I wish I had a dollar for every time I learned about the origin of a breakthrough idea and asked, "Why didn't I think of that?"Here are some other examples:o Ruth Wakefield: Toll House chocolate cookieso Mary Andersen: windshield wiperso Stephanie Kwolek: Kevlaro Bette Naismith Graham: Liquid Paper®o Patsy O. Shernan: Scotchgard™o Margaret E. Knight: paper bagso Becky Schroeder: the Glo-sheetMore often than not, someone becomes exasperated, asking "Why hasn't someone come up with a way -- or a better way -- to ...?" and then provides the answer. That's essentially what happened to several men: Spencer Silver (Post-it Notes), George de Mestral (Teflon), Wilbert and Robert Gore (Goretex) and lso what happened with many of the inventors that Catherine Thimmesh discusses in her book.She concludes, "Suppose you have an invention of your own. It's different, it's new, it's neat. Now what? Obtaining a patent may be an important first step." She then explains how to proceed, noting that obtaining a patent can be an extended and expensive process. "Not all inventions will benefit from having a patent." It makes sense to contact the U.S. Patent Office at its website and check out the resources available, then obtain legal counsel.As with Women in Science, this book challenges young women to "think of everything" that can be improved, or replaced by something else that is better. It also challenges others -- parents, other family members, friends, teachers, coaches, and clergy -- to support their efforts.
P**E
Fun & Educational
Great read for young girls to encourage them to think “outside the box”!
C**A
Paper bags to Kevlar...you're welcome!
Purchased as a gift for my 5 year old daughter.GOOD: The book provides a chronological timeline of known inventions and their female inventors spanning from 3000BC to the 20th century. This timeline sandwiches the book's content. An introduction into the historical role of women in inventing is then presented as well as a history as to why women weren't credited with inventions subject to existing patent laws of the times. It also includes 3 additional female inventors within the Intro. The meat of the book presents individual female inventors and their stories through a sweet anecdote for each that describes the "necessity" and/or context that led to each individual's invention. The stories and descriptions are each generally 2-3 pages with colorful and vivid illustrations. While not extensive or exhaustive by any means it does provide insight into simple inventions like the paper grocery bag to the more complex of Kevlar. The book's intended audience are young girls. As such, not much life detail is provided about each "inventress" outside of the context of their invention. It easily serves as a jumping off pointing for exploring further and providing subject matter for potential research papers...etc..etc. Also provides a list of contact information for contests and organizations that encourage youth creativity.BAD: It's a small book that provides about 12 stories in total. Again, the personal life history of each is briefly touched on if at all.These are quick and easy stories to be read by parents without occasion.
C**B
Hooray for Women.
A wonderful accounting over an expanse of time of ingenious inventions by women. The unwritten backstory consist of inventions when women weren't allowed to hold patents and their husbands had to apply. Hence, many inventions true inventors have been subsumed in the patriarchy. Another part of the backstory comes from reading the types of inventions and realizing that very many of them were conceived to make domestic life more efficient since women were relegated to the domestic sphere. This is a great primer for all people and especially young women to impart some of the many ways women excelled in times of oppression.
R**E
Our family has enjoyed this book!
We have three daughters and read this to them after learning about it from another family that enjoyed it. For families that enjoy entrepreneur and inventor stories and knowing how things that we use in every day life came to be... this is a good one. We read this while our girls were in 4th-6th grade.
D**4
Granddaughter likes it a lot.
I bought one for my 9 year old granddaughter and she is enjoying the learning of invention and innovations made by females. Good stuff. - - Grandpa.
E**N
Great selection
A great book on inventions and women inventors!
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