JUVENILE NONFICTION / Biography & Autobiography / Women
Label
JUVENILE NONFICTION / Biography & Autobiography / Women
Name
JUVENILE NONFICTION / Biography & Autobiography / Women
Source
bisacsh
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Incoming Resources
- Coretta Scott King, Kathleen Krull ; interior illustrations by Laura Freeman
- The women who launched the computer age, by Laurie Calkhoven ; illustrated by Alyssa Petersen
- Taylor Swift, born to sing!, by Marie Morreale
- Who was Princess Diana?, by Ellen Labrecque ; illustrated by Jerry Hoare
- Who Was Princess Diana?
- Who is Jane Goodall?, by Roberta Edwards ; illustrated by John O'Brien
- Who Was Marie Antoinette?, by Dana Meachen Rau ; illustrated by John O'Brien
- First ladies, written by Amy Pastan ; in association with the Smithsonian Institution
- Virginia was a spy, the story of World War II heroine Virginia Hall, by Catherine Urdahl ; iIllustrated by Gary Kelley
- Spectacular sisters, amazing stories of sisters from around the world, [written and illustrated by] Aura Lewis
- Who was Harriet Beecher Stowe?, by Dana Meachen Rau ; illustrated by Gregory Copeland
- Who was Laura Ingalls Wilder?, by Patricia Brennan Demuth ; illustrated by Tim Foley
- The librarian of Basra, a true story from Iraq, written & illustrated by Jeanette Winter ; designed by Judythe Sieck
- Miss Paul and the president, the creative campaign for women's right to vote, Dean Robbins ; illustrated by Nancy Zhang
- Bad girls of fashion, style rebels from Cleopatra to Lady Gaga, Jennifer Croll ; illustrated by Ada Buchholc
- Katherine Johnson, by Thea Feldman ; illustrated by Alyssa Petersen
- Trailblazer, the story of ballerina Raven Wilkinson, by Leda Schubert ; illustrated by Theodore Taylor III ; with a foreword by Misty Copeland
- 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
- What do you do with a voice like that?, the story of extraordinary congresswoman Barbara Jordan, Chris Barton ; illustrated by Ekua Holmes
- Finish the fight!, the brave and revolutionary women who fought for the right to vote, written by the Staff of The New York Times, including Veronica Chambers [and 5 others] ; portrait illustrations by Monica Ahanonu [and 11 others]
- A world of her own, 24 amazing women explorers and adventurers, Michael Elsohn Ross
- The woman who split the atom, the life of Lise Meitner, by Marissa Moss
- The lightning dreamer, Cuba's greatest abolitionist, Margarita Engle
- Clara and Davie, Patricia Polacco
- Women heroes of World War I, 16 remarkable resisters, soldiers, spies, and medics, Kathryn J. Atwood
- I am Helen Keller, by Brad Meltzer ; illustrated by Christopher Eliopoulos
- Dorothea Lange, the photographer who found the faces of the depression, Carole Boston Weatherford ; pictures by Sarah Green
- Who is Sonia Sotomayor?, by Megan Stine ; illustrated by Dede Putra
- Taking cover, one girl's story of growing up during the Iranian Revolution, Nioucha Homayoonfar ; foreword by Firoozeh Dumas
- Who Is Kamala Harris?, by Kirsten Anderson ; illustrated by Manuel Gutierrez
- I am Malala Yousafzai, Brad Meltzer ; illustrated by Christopher Eliopoulos
- Who Was Laura Ingalls Wilder?, by Patricia Brennan Demuth ; illustrated by Tim Foley
- Claudette Colvin, written by Lesa Cline-Ransome ; interior illustrations by Gillian Flint
- Brown girl dreaming, Jacqueline Woodson
- Reporting under fire, 16 daring women war correspondents and photojournalists, Kerrie Logan Hollihan
- She takes a stand, 16 fearless activists who have changed the world, Michael Elsohn Ross
- The original cowgirl, the wild adventures of Lucille Mulhall, by Heather Lang ; pictures by Suzanne Beaky
- I am Sacagawea, Brad Meltzer ; illustrated by Christopher Eliopoulos
- Free as a bird, the story of Malala, written and illustrated by Lina Maslo
- Who was Jane Austen?, by Sarah Fabiny ; illustrated by Jerry Hoare
- Herstory, 50 women and girls who shook up the world, Katherine Halligan ; illustrated by Sarah Walsh
- Jane Goodall, a champion of chimpanzees, by Sarah Albee ; pictures by Gustavo Mazali
- Code name Pauline, memoirs of a World War II special agent, Pearl Witherington Cornioley with HerveĢ Larroque ; edited by Kathryn J. Atwood
- Eleanor makes her mark, by Barbara Kerley ; illustrated by Edwin Fotheringham
- Ruby Bridges, written by Kekla Magoon ; interior illustrations by Gillian Flint
- Harriet Tubman and the Underground Railroad, David A. Adler
- Who Was Sojourner Truth?, by Yona Zeldis McDonough ; illustrated by Jim Eldridge
- Hidden figures young readers' edition, Margot Lee Shetterly
- A lady has the floor, Belva Lockwood speaks out for women's rights, Kate Hannigan ; illustrated by Alison Jay
- She did it!, 21 women who changed the way we think, Emily Arnold McCully