JUVENILE NONFICTION / Biography & Autobiography / Women
Label
JUVENILE NONFICTION / Biography & Autobiography / Women
Name
JUVENILE NONFICTION / Biography & Autobiography / Women
Source
bisacsh
Actions
Incoming Resources
- Subject of48
- Good night stories for rebel girls, Francesca Cavallo and Elena Favilli, 2
- Who was Catherine the Great?, by Pam Pollack and Meg Belviso ; illustrated by Dede Putra
- Bad sister, written by Charise Mericle Harper ; art by Rory Lucey
- Maya Lin, artist-architect of light and lines, Jeanne Walker Harvey ; illustrated by Dow Phumiruk
- Dorothea Lange, the photographer who found the faces of the depression, Carole Boston Weatherford ; pictures by Sarah Green
- The flying girl, how Aida de Acosta learned to soar, Margarita Engle ; illustrated by Sara Palacios
- The girl who named Pluto, the story of Venetia Burney, Alice B. McGinty ; illustrated by Elizabeth Haidle
- Dreaming in code, Ada Byron Lovelace, computer pioneer, Emily Arnold McCully
- Mary Cassatt, extraordinary impressionist painter, Barbara Herkert ; illustrated by Gabi Swiatkowska
- Lion on the inside, how one girl changed basketball, written by Bilqis Abdul-Qaadir with Judith Henderson ; illustrated by Katherine Ahmed
- Zaha Hadid, written by Ma Isabel Sánchez Vegara ; illustrated by Asun Amar
- March forward, girl, from young warrior to Little Rock Nine, by Melba Pattillo Beals ; illustrated by Frank Morrison
- Who was Maria Tallchief?, by Catherine Gourley ; illustrated by Val Paul Taylor
- This is your time, Ruby Bridges
- What do you do with a voice like that?, the story of extraordinary congresswoman Barbara Jordan, written by Chris Barton ; illustrated by Ekua Holmes
- The woman who split the atom, Lise Meitner, by Marissa Moss
- Turning pages, my life story, Sonia Sotomayor ; illustrated by Lulu Delacre
- Queen of the diamond, the Lizzie Murphy story, Emily Arnold McCully
- Streetcar to justice, how Elizabeth Jennings won the right to ride in New York, by Amy Hill Hearth
- Women who dared, 52 stories of fearless daredevils, adventurers, & rebels, Linda Skeers ; illustrated by Livi Gosling
- Bloom, a story of fashion designer Elsa Schiaparelli, words by Kyo Maclear ; pictures by Julie Morstad
- HerStory, 50 women and girls who shook up the world, Katherine Halligan ; illustrated by Sarah Walsh
- Margaret Chase Smith, written by Ruby Shamir ; interior illustrations by Gillian Flint
- I am Malala, how one girl stood up for education and changed the world, Malala Yousafzai with Patricia McCormick
- Women of steel and stone, 22 inspirational architects, engineers, and landscape designers, Anna M. Lewis
- Little dreamers, visionary women around the world, Vashti Harrison
- The Water Lady, how Darlene Arviso helps a thirsty Navajo Nation, by Alice B. McGinty ; illustrated by Shonto Begay
- Champions of women's soccer, Ann Killion
- Changing the equation, 50+ US Black women in STEM, Tonya Bolden
- Virginia Apgar, written by Dr. Sayantani DasGupta ; interior illustrations by Gillian Flint
- Speak up, speak out!, the extraordinary life of "fighting Shirley Chisholm", by Tonya Bolden ; with a foreword by Stacey Abrams
- A world of her own, 24 amazing women explorers and adventurers, Michael Elsohn Ross
- Shirley Chisholm is a verb!, written by Veronica Chambers ; illustrated by Rachelle Baker
- The bluest of blues, Anna Atkins and the first book of photographs, by Fiona Robinson
- Code name Pauline, memoirs of a World War II special agent, Pearl Witherington Cornioley with Hervé Larroque ; edited by Kathryn J. Atwood
- The beloved world of Sonia Sotomayor, Sonia Sotomayor
- Roses and radicals, the epic story of how American women won the right to vote, by Susan Zimet & Todd Hasak-Lowy
- Reaching for the Moon, the autobiography of NASA mathematician Katherine Johnson, Katherine Johnson
- Ruth Bader Ginsburg, the case of R.B.G. vs. inequality, by Jonah Winter ; illustrated by Stacy Innerst
- I am Harriet Tubman, Brad Meltzer ; illustrated by Christopher Eliopoulos
- An equal shot, how the law title IX changed America, Helaine Becker ; Illustrated by Dow Phumiruk
- Amelia Earhart is on the moon?, Dan Gutman ; illustrated by Allison Steinfeld
- Ordinary, extraordinary Jane Austen, the story of six novels, three notebooks, a writing box, and one clever girl, by Deborah Hopkinson ; illustrations by Qin Leng
- Who says women can't be computer programmers?, the story of Ada Lovelace, Tanya Lee Stone ; illustrated by Marjorie Priceman
- Who was Abigail Adams?, by True Kelley ; illustrated by John O'Brien
- Brown girl dreaming, Jacqueline Woodson
- Wangari Maathai, written by Eucabeth Odhiambo ; interior illustrations by Gillian Flint
- Building Zaha, the story of architect Zaha Hadid, Victoria Tentler-Krylov