My eight-year-old daughter is a scientist. This isn’t a career choice. This is just a fact of her being.
When she was 18 months old, she accidentally pulled on her sensitive big brother’s hair.
He cried!
Another child might have felt guilty or might have been upset. Not my daughter. She had only one possible reaction:
I wonder what will happen when I do that again!
And again and again.
Fast forward seven years, and she’s a regular exhibitor at our county science fair. If I want her to practice her penmanship, we do science. If she learns new words, it’s through science.
In the midst of this we had an accidental book club. We’re homeschoolers, and we do a lot of driving. Those two combined mean that we love audiobooks. I balk at the high price tag, so we get most of our audiobooks from the library. This means that more often than not, we listen to whatever happens to be on the shelves.
Unintentionally, two of the books we listened to were about girls who love science.
The first was The Evolution of Calpurnia Tate. This lovely book by Jacqueline Kelly covers nearly a year in the life of a girl living in rural Texas at the turn of the 20th century. She forms an unexpected alliance with her grandfather, an amateur naturalist, and becomes entranced with science the way that some girls now become entranced with teen idols.
This positive portrayal of a girl scientist in a place where she is so completely out of place is riveting. Not only did it inspire more interest in evolution and botany in my already science-loving kids, but it presented the role model of a girl who is a scientist against all odds.
The second book, The Green Glass Sea by Ellen Klages, is also historical, set in Los Alamos as scientists work desperately to create the “gadget” that will end the war. Dewey is a born scientist also, in this case, an inventor. She loves to create her own gadgets, and largely ignores the taunting of the other kids. When she is unexpectedly required to spend a few weeks living with another family, she forms an alliance with another misfit girl, who is finding her calling as an artist.
Sea and Tate are very different books. In Tate, the negative pressure on the main character comes largely from adults. In Sea, however, adults are largely charmed by Dewey’s inventiveness, but the kids are just short of brutal to her.
In both books, however, today’s girl scientists can see girls sticking to science because it is what calls to them. Interestingly, both books almost ignore the girls’ schooling, which seems tangential to their real lives.
In the midst of this mini girl-scientist book festival, it occurred to me to look for more books. In my wanderings, I got a recommendation to ask Tanya Turek, who runs the blog books4yourkids.com. She mentioned that Sea has a sequel, White Sands, Red Menace, which I had found. She also reminded me of A Wrinkle in Time, which fits closely enough to the theme I was looking for. But then she came up with a blank.
“I spent quite a bit of time on the internal book search system at the Barnes & Noble where I work as well as the internet and I could not come up with any more books that what I suggested already,” she e-mailed me. “I think that there really, truly are only a handful of books that have scientific themes AND female protagonists.”
I can imagine the reasons for this: Few women are scientists, and scientists in general are unlikely also to be fiction writers, so when you look for the cross-section of those two small groups, you apparently only come up with two current writers amongst our many writers of fiction for children.
To explain the lack of these books, however, does not excuse it! We need more books about girls who love science. Girl scientists, even in the 21st century, meet with a good measure of what met Calpurnia in 1899 and Dewey in 1945: misunderstanding, social pressure, and disappointment. Books are where misfit kids can find themselves, and where they find out they aren’t misfits after all.
When my daughter was three, she was nearly impossible to have in a preschool room. All order would be upset; all expectations would be stymied. Forget learning outcomes, her teachers just wanted her to stop experimenting!
I finally found the right teacher for her. One day when I went to pick her up, Cari said, “I have realized what is going on here. Your daughter is a scientist. She must find out how everything works, and the laws behind everything the classroom.”
As soon as Cari understood my daughter, things went much more smoothly.
Books like Calpurnia Tate and Green Glass Sea will hopefully help my daughter understand herself.
Suki Wessling is a writer, blogger, former English teacher, and homeschooler living in Coastal California. Links to her work can be found at www.SukiWessling.com. Check out her Parenting and Education Page on Facebook.





7 Comments
I'm a woman scientist, my kids love science, and a few years ago, I started writing fiction. After reading your post, I'm inspired to try to write a middle grade science-based novel with a female protagonist… If only there were more hours in the day! (Maybe next year when my youngest starts kindergarten.)
I'll definitely check out the books you recommended for my two daughters.
My website contains lots of science experiments you can do using stuff you already have around the house and I have an iphone app of kidscience coming out soon! My goal is to be a role model for girls and to make science easy for parents to do with their kids.
I'd recommend Samantha Hansen Has Rocks in Her Head by Nancy Viau.
Product description from Amazon: Ten-year-old Samantha Hansen is a mad scientist. But not the crazy kind—she doesn’t blow stuff up or mix potions or dissect bugs. She just loves science—especially rocks—and figuring out how the world around her works. But there are some things there just isn’t a scientific answer for. Like, why can’t her bossy big sister keep her hands off Sam’s rock collection? And why can’t Sam control her temper? There are some bigger questions, too, like why did her father have to die? And why won’t her mom talk about him anymore?
Great discussion. I'm a big fan of what I call "sciency fiction," fiction in which real, accurate science is integral to the story (as opposed to "science fiction," which includes speculative science). The Green Glass Sea and The Evolution of Calpurnia Tate top my list, regardless of the gender of the protagonist. I'm always looking for more books to add to my list, and I hadn't heard of Samantha Hansen, so I'll have to check it out.
What about Project Mulberry by Linda Sue Park?
Some other recommendations I've gotten that I haven't read:
The Secret Science Alliance (graphic novel – my daughter read it and loved it, but she went through it in half an hour)
Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie
The Time Travelers, by Linda Buckley-Archer
Liz, Yes! Please do write a girl scientist book! As you can see, there's lots of room for more, and an audience patiently (or not so patiently) waiting. — Suki
I just came across this while I was looking for something else. http://www.amazon.com/Octavia-Boones-Questions-Universe-Everything/dp/0763644919/ref=ntt_at_ep_dpi_9
It looks like it could be thorny, but it's worth a look.
Calpurnia and Green Glass are excellent, Wrinkle in Time is a classic. Great post and near to my heart as a tween/teen author who loves science. Just finished Across the Universe, which features a teenage girl on a space ark to another star system. Science fiction-y with a romance tint.
Biographies of women scientists who are still doing science are a great way for girls to connect, too. While researching Bone Detective and Space Rocks, I had the pleasure of hanging out with a couple of amazing, funny, interesting women who then did a series of hands-on science projects live and in person with readers of their books. That personal connection is priceless.
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