In 1962, Maurice Wilkins, Francis Crick, and James Watson received the
Nobel Prize, but it was Rosalind Franklin's data and photographs of DNA
that led to their discovery.
Brenda Maddox tells a powerful story of a remarkably single-minded,
forthright, and tempestuous young woman who, at the age of fifteen,
decided she was going to be a scientist, but who was airbrushed out of
the greatest scientific discovery of the twentieth century.