Little People, Big Dreams: Marie Curie written by Maria
Isabella Sanchez Vegara and illustrated by Frau Isa (Quarto
Group UK)
HB RRP $18.99 ISBN 9781847809612
Reviewed by
Daniela Andrews
‘When Marie was a little girl, she made a vow to
herself … she was going to be a scientist, not a princess.’
The ‘Little
People, Big Dreams’ series showcases high-achieving women in history, all of
whom acted on their childhood dreams. They are beautifully presented,
hardcover, biographical picture books that target readers aged 5 – 8 years.
This title,
about the gifted Marie Curie, explains how she was not allowed to study at
university in her home country of Poland because she was a woman. Fortunately
for the rest of the world (who would one day benefit from her scientific
discoveries) she packed her bags and moved to France where she ‘soon became the
best maths and science student in Paris’.
The book goes on
to talk about her husband, Pierre, and their Nobel Prize winning discovery of
radium and polonium. It also applauds her strength after Pierre’s sudden death,
and the hard work that lead her to her second Nobel Prize. The text ends on an
uplifting note, showing the many other girls whom she inspired, queuing up to
study at the Radium Institute at the University of Paris.
Marie Curie’s
story is conveyed in simple text, with only 1–3 sentences featuring across each
double page. There is a longer biography included at the end of the book,
featuring four black and white photographs.
Frau Isa’s
illustrations are lightly textured, in a gentle watercolour palette. They offer
deeper meaning to the text, both informatively and emotionally. For example,
the text never mentions Marie’s connection to the development of x-rays, but
the pictures show an injured soldier being x-rayed. And when Marie accepts her second Nobel Prize
award, the illustrations reflect her grief in both her facial expression and in
a silhouetted empty chair in the first row.
The final
picture, showing a full-colour Marie Curie sitting on a pile of books amongst a
row of bemused (rather drab-looking) gentlemen, is a definite feminist
celebration of Marie’s achievements in a male-dominated field.
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