Her Epic Adventure: 25 Daring Women Who Inspire a Life Less Ordinary
by Julia De Laurentiis Johnston
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"A thrilling look at 25 female adventurers from around the world who made their marks on history. Women have long been badass adventurers, loop the looping as trick pilots or braving the grueling climb to the top of Mount Everest. But their stories have not always got the recognition they deserve. Here are the stories of 25 remarkable women who have soared the skies, climbed the world's highest peaks and sailed around the world. There are the famous adventurers, such as Amelia Earhart and show more Junko Tabei, as well as the lesser-known women, such as Diana Nyad, who at age 64 became the first person to swim from Cuba to Florida without a shark cage (and trust us, she might have needed one!). Alongside each biography are fun, interactive sidebars that show kids just what it takes to become an adventurer themselves, like how to survive an avalanche or what exactly happens to your body in space. The featured women are incredibly diverse, with many stories of people of color, women with disabilities and LGBTQ+ women. What they all have in common is that they didn't let anything get in the way of their dreams. With playful illustrations to enhance the compelling stories, it's a book that shows kids that anything -- and any adventure -- is possible!"-- show lessTags
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Short tributes to active, courageous women who accomplished extraordinary feats and firsts.
Though Bessie Coleman, Amelia Earhart, and Sylvia Earle have well-earned entries, most of the achievers here will be less familiar even to inveterate role-model seekers. Also, except for Charlotte Small, a half-White/half-Nehiyaw (Cree) explorer who traveled over three times farther than the roughly contemporary Lewis and Clark, the lineup is a relatively modern one. It’s racially diverse enough to give nods to African American anthropologist and novelist Zora Neale Hurston for her studies of Vodou and Kalpana Chawla, the first astronaut born in India, and it’s otherwise inclusive enough to feature paraplegic climber/skier Karen Darke and to show more hail both 64-year-old lesbian Diana Nyad’s Cuba-to–Key West swim and teenager Laura Dekker’s solo sail around the world. (The latter three women are White.) Mention of the Aymara women in Bolivia who call themselves the Cholitas Climbers and a group entry for the Black Mambas, a South African anti-poaching squad, expand the titular total, as does a brief interview at the end with intercontinental motorcyclist Lois Pryce, who’s White. Johnston’s profiles focus more on exploits than personal details (though there is a reference to Nyad’s “girlfriend”), and if Perera’s painted portraits are more representational than realistic, they do pose their smiling subjects in outdoorsy garb and settings. (This book was reviewed digitally with 10.3-by-18.8-inch double-page spreads viewed at 80% of actual size.)
An unusually diverse gallery also valuable for calling attention to some less-renowned deeds and doers. (map, index, resource list) (Collective biography. 7-10)
-Kirkus Review show less
Though Bessie Coleman, Amelia Earhart, and Sylvia Earle have well-earned entries, most of the achievers here will be less familiar even to inveterate role-model seekers. Also, except for Charlotte Small, a half-White/half-Nehiyaw (Cree) explorer who traveled over three times farther than the roughly contemporary Lewis and Clark, the lineup is a relatively modern one. It’s racially diverse enough to give nods to African American anthropologist and novelist Zora Neale Hurston for her studies of Vodou and Kalpana Chawla, the first astronaut born in India, and it’s otherwise inclusive enough to feature paraplegic climber/skier Karen Darke and to show more hail both 64-year-old lesbian Diana Nyad’s Cuba-to–Key West swim and teenager Laura Dekker’s solo sail around the world. (The latter three women are White.) Mention of the Aymara women in Bolivia who call themselves the Cholitas Climbers and a group entry for the Black Mambas, a South African anti-poaching squad, expand the titular total, as does a brief interview at the end with intercontinental motorcyclist Lois Pryce, who’s White. Johnston’s profiles focus more on exploits than personal details (though there is a reference to Nyad’s “girlfriend”), and if Perera’s painted portraits are more representational than realistic, they do pose their smiling subjects in outdoorsy garb and settings. (This book was reviewed digitally with 10.3-by-18.8-inch double-page spreads viewed at 80% of actual size.)
An unusually diverse gallery also valuable for calling attention to some less-renowned deeds and doers. (map, index, resource list) (Collective biography. 7-10)
-Kirkus Review show less
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