Review of the Day: Nothing Stopped Sophie by Cheryl Bardoe and Barbara McClintock
Nothing Stopped Sophie: The Story of Unshakable Mathematician Sophie Germain
By Cheryl Bardoe
Illustrated by Barbara McClintock
Little, Brown and Co.
$17.99
ISBN: 978-0316278201
On shelves June 12th
I think we’ve done it. I think we’ve finally moved completely into a new era of biographical picture books. High time, says I! Gone are the days when a picture book biography had to be of somebody already famous. Gone the days of scanning the Biography section of the children’s room in the library only to see the same ten individuals over and over again. Now the elegant, intelligent, and obscure are filling book after book for kids. Whom do we credit? Publishers? STEM curriculums? The Common Core State Standards? The creators of these books themselves? Maybe the answer is E: All/Some of the Above. Because it isn’t merely the fact that these biographies are celebrating little known figures that’s noteworthy. They’re also celebrating people in too little lauded fields. Rocket scientists. Costume designers. Poets. And, once in a very great while, mathematicians. When I look at Nothing Stopped Sophie: The Story of Unshakable Mathematician Sophie Germain I don’t just see a picture book biography of a female mathematician from the 1800s. I see possibility. I see heroism. I see remarkable strength in the face of opposition. Basically, I see a story more kids should really know (and adults too, while we’re at it).
Outwardly, there was little about Sophie Germain that would have raised any alerts that she was different from other girls living in 18th Century France. Her father owned a fabric shop and she helped out. She’d stay up late reading. But rather than fiction or religious texts, Sophie liked to read and study math. Her parents tried to dissuade her but there was no use. Over time, Sophie got her math education under a male pseudonym. When her secret was revealed, she was seen as a kind of adorable little marvel and not a serious mathematician. All that began to change when she witnessed an experiment involving the effect of vibrations on sand. When the Academy of Sciences offered a reward of 3,000 francs to anyone who could predict patterns of vibration with mathematical equations, it was Sophie that tried (and failed) and tried (and almost got it) and tried . . . and got it! Thanks to her work, we have tall buildings and powerful bridges. Endmatter in this book includes further notes on Sophie’s life, a Bibliography, information on the effects of vibrations, and Notes from the author and artist on their research and work.
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Now let’s look at the subtitle of this book. “The Story of Unshakable Mathematician Sophie Germain.” I like that word. “Unshakable”. I don’t pay a lot of attention to subtitles of children’s picture book biographies because usually, if they’re doing a good job, they feel natural and disinclined to draw your notice. But in the case of the Sophie Germain book the word “Unshakable” is just odd enough to grab your notice. It’s a good choice of language. A woman that perseveres in doing what she loves, with almost no support, could be called “unshakable”. But it’s also a rather charming play on words considering her work with vibrations as well. And unshakable women abound, but you have to decide how to craft their stories when you give their lives form and function in the form of a picture book. A human life is a messy thing. Kudos then to author Cheryl Bardoe not simply for selecting Sophie as her subject, but in giving us a woman who fought the odds, is a hero in a field that could stand to laud a few more females, and whose work has applications in the larger world today.
I’d like to tell you the degree to which this book influenced me. I’m no math geek. I sort of appreciate math in the same way I appreciate kale. I don’t partake of it much myself, but I think the world is a stronger place for it. And yet, almost immediately after reading this book, I rushed to YouTube and typed in “Chladni” and “vibration” to watch sand move at different frequencies into different patterns. Have five minutes? Try it. If I lived in the 18th century I’d probably have been more inclined to ascribe mystical reasons to the shapes there than scientific or mathematical ones. Part of what Bardoe does so well here is explain why Sophie’s work is important to us today, above and beyond the heroism of her own passions. If Sophie had worked as a mathematician and wrote equations, that could be enough. Yet as it stands, her accomplishments, above and beyond becoming the first woman to win a grand prize from the Royal Academy of Sciences, are visible in our tallest buildings and our bridges. That’s a concrete thing to tie to a hitherto little lauded figure. If I, as a librarian, was inspired to look at the sand dancing on the glass plates after reading this book, how hard is it to extrapolate and say that there won’t be girls reading this book, seeing a woman persevering, inspired to keep going in their own lives (math related or not)?
You won’t find it in this book, but a mathematician told me that Sophie Germain once said “Algebra is nothing more than geometry, in words; geometry is nothing more than algebra, in pictures.” So let’s talk pictures. Please answer me the following question as best as you can: When seeking an illustrator for a picture book biography with a focus on math, what qualities do you consider most important? Would you want someone with prior interest/experience with the subject? Someone adept at turning cerebral concepts into visual tropes? Or would you simply select someone talented and hope for the best? See, this is why I’ll never want to be a book editor. There are just too many ways you can go, and who’s to say that one decision or another is best? I guess if I, personally, were to choose, I’d want someone who did their homework, but that also knew how to highlight the beauty in the math itself. Enter: Barbara McClintock.
I have wracked my brain, trying to remember if Ms. McClintock has ever done a picture book biography before. Finally I had to cave and look it up. Answer: nope. Aside from the occasional picture books with nonfiction elements, Ms. McClintock has studiously avoided the world of nonfiction for years. And now, after reading this book, I’m liable to get upset about that. Dang it, Barbara! You’re really quite good at this. Why deny us your talent for this long? In many ways this feels very akin to The Boy Who Loved Math by Deborah Heiligman, illustrated by LeUyen Pham, and the art is a key part of that. Like Pham, McClintock integrates numbers into the text seamlessly. They are both a design element as well as a practical method of highlighting important concepts and moments. For example, in one of my favorite parts of the book, young Sophie examines Greek equations that explain how to make water flow uphill, show a single man pulling a single ship ashore, and measure the size of the earth. Each of these comes with an accompanying visual aid, which means that McClintock has to do something I’ve not seen her do before. As she mentions in her Note in the back of the book, she uses collage for the first time in this book. So not only do we have ancient illustrations but also her letters, books, newspaper pages, and more integrated into the art.
This is all the more impressive when you consider that Ms. McClintock has to illustrate some less than entirely thrilling moments. Take away the art and then just read the text. It’s a great story, and deserving of close examination, but aside from the occasional French Revolution, there’s not a lot of action. Sophie writes a lot of letters. She has a visit from a gentleman caller. She writes equations. Corrects equations. Writes them again. Now try to visualize all of this in an interesting way. McClintock’s solutions are to try something new. In addition to collage she brings markers and gouache into the mix. Then she breaks things up. A picture of Sophie writing is split into at least sixteen parts. A sequence of trial and error shows her in eleven different places on (one presumes) eleven different days. For moments in a drawing room talking math, or making vibrations in the street with her feet, the math appears in the air itself, like a living substance she breathes in. The vibrations play a particularly important role, and McClintock explains in her Note her desire to turn a newsboy’s shouts into vibrations that bend buildings, and tumble birds out of the air (turning into papers on the next page). I was a bit sad that when the numbers were part of the architecture at the beginning of the book there was no real need for them to be that way aside from the fact that Sophie herself loved numbers. I prefer it when the metaphorical visual aids support the story in a concrete way, but aside from that mild quibble I think McClintock did a stand up and cheer job.
Biographies of female mathematicians are in a funny little place, these days. They’re out there, sure thing, but they’re almost entirely limited math as it applies to computer science. You can understand why. With the rise of computers, women have seen their own opportunities grow and flourish. As a result we get women involved in the earliest days of programming (Ada Lovelace) as well as women with more contemporary flair (Grace Hopper and the mathematicians of Hidden Figures). Still, I feel like I’ve been waiting for the female version of Deborah Heiligman’s aforementioned The Boy Who Loved Math for years now. Where’s the story about a girl who loved math and made a difference in a way that didn’t involve computers? Together, Bardoe and McClintock have done just that. They’ve gone into new territory, tried new artistic techniques, and brought to life ideas that until now have never been displayed in this way in a biography for kids. Bardoe had to turn a life into a story. McClintock had to make the invisible visible. That they not only succeeded but triumphed is to be lauded and loved. I love this book. And whether or not they already like math or science, a lot of boys and girls are going to love this book too.
On shelves June 12th.
Like This? Then Try:
- The Boy Who Loved Math by Debra Heiligman, ill. LeUyen Pham
- Grace Hopper: Queen of Computer Code by Laurie Walmark, ill. Katy Wu
- Ada Lovelace, Poet of Science: The First Computer Programmer by Diane Stanley, ill. Jessie Hartland
- Ada’s Ideas: The Story of Ada Lovelace, the World’s First Computer Programmer by Fiona Robinson
Filed under: Best Books, Best Books of 2018, Reviews, Reviews 2018

About Betsy Bird
Betsy Bird is currently the Collection Development Manager of the Evanston Public Library system and a former Materials Specialist for New York Public Library. She has served on Newbery, written for Horn Book, and has done other lovely little things that she'd love to tell you about but that she's sure you'd find more interesting to hear of in person. Her opinions are her own and do not reflect those of EPL, SLJ, or any of the other acronyms you might be able to name. Follow her on Twitter: @fuseeight.
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This sounds like a perfect addition to a unit I do with my sixth graders! Thanks!
I don’t want to wait until June!
Me neither. I’d like to give this book to my daughter’s first grade teacher THIS year. She’s running a GEMS program — Girls engaging with Engineering MAth and Science and this fits the bill great. (And she’s got a Sophie in the program)
I think I’m going to love this book, too. Barbara’s skill as an artist goes way beyond those of many, many illustrators nowadays.
This may be her finest work. And that’s saying something.
Saying it is her finest work is saying something indeed!! Going into this my favorite of her masterpieces is ‘My Grandfather”s Coat.’ Tremendous review!
Ooooh! Can’t wait for this book! And I am going to share her quote about geometry being algebra in pictures with my 8th grade daughter who is not loving geometry right now.
I could use this as a basis for a program in the library. Has anybody made or done something with Chladni waves in their library?
Thank you for this review. It sounds like a gem of a book, and the videos I found at your suggestion were fascinating!!