by Richard Maurer (Author)
A stunning and intimate biography of Margaret Hamilton, the computer engineer who helped Apollo 11 and mankind get from the Earth to the moon.
First-hand accounts, exclusive interviews with the legendary Margaret Hamilton, and detailed science populate the pages of this remarkable biography.
In 1969, mankind successfully left our atmosphere and landed on the moon. It took countless hours of calculations, training, wonder, and sacrifice from all of the men and women who worked hard to make that landing. One of those people was Margaret Hamilton.
A young computer engineer, Hamilton was hired to develop the completely new software used in the groundbreaking Apollo Space Program. Soon she became the lead engineer, one of the few women in the almost entirely male-dominated profession. But it wasn't always easy.
In The Woman in the Moon, science-writer and journalist Richard Maurer (Destination Moon, 2019) dives deep into the backstory of this extraordinary woman. With first-hand interviews and access to primary sources, this striking biography perfectly captures the exciting atmosphere of the Space Race and the inspiring figure of Margaret Hamilton.
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"After the moon landings... practically no one knew about the computer and software engineers who had played such a crucial role" writes Maurer (Destination Moon) in this corrective work--a biography of mathematician Margaret Hamilton (b. 1936), who led the team that coded automated functions into the "guidance and control system that would tell the astronauts where they were." Three sections span Hamilton's Michigan upbringing, schooling, and marriage; her being hired by MIT to help code the "revolutionary machine that would conduct astronauts to the Moon and back"; and her later involvement with the Apollo program and beyond. Throughout, the book outlines her pivotal role in naming and legitimizing the field of software engineering while opening the door for women in STEM fields. Occasional interstitials ("Katherine Johnson," "Ada, Countess of Lovelace") contextualize aspects of Hamilton's life, and photographs and pop culture references elaborate on the era for contemporary readers. Detailing the beginnings of software engineering, the ins and outs of the Apollo missions, and the social arc away from the "men only" establishment, this straightforward read credits a female pioneer whose work brought a concept to life. Ages 10-14. (Mar.)
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