An empowering, inspiring--and accessible!--nonfiction picture book
about the eleven-year-old girl who actually named the newly discovered
Pluto in 1930.
When Venetia Burney's grandfather reads aloud from the newspaper about a
new discovery--a "ninth major planet" that has yet to be named--her
eleven-year-old mind starts whirring. She is studying the planets in
school and loves Roman mythology. "It might be called Pluto," she says,
thinking of the dark underworld. Grandfather loves the idea and contacts
his friend at London's Royal Astronomical Society, who writes to
scientists at the Lowell Observatory in Massachusetts, where Pluto was
discovered. After a vote, the scientists agree unanimously: Pluto is the
perfect name for the dark, cold planet.
Here is a picture book perfect for STEM units and for all
children--particularly girls--who have ever dreamed of becoming a
scientist.