REMEMBERING ROSALIND FRANKLIN by Tanya Lee Stone gets starred Horn Book review
Stone’s dedication—“For anyone who did something awesome and didn’t feel the love”—sets the reparative tone for this picture-book biography of scientist Franklin (1920–1958), whose Photo 51 cracked the DNA code while competing researchers James Watson and Francis Crick took the credit (and the 1962 Nobel Prize). As she weaves science and history, Stone unravels dual mysteries centering on the double helix: how the “secret of life…makes you— YOU” and how a “twist of fate” triggered Franklin’s posthumous recognition. Powers’s watercolors perfectly blend representative and expressive styles. Realistically rendered characters and period details set the story in its mid- twentieth-century milieu, while experimental techniques offer evocative visual commentary; for example, when Franklin argues with Watson and Crick, blue watercolor blotches disrupt the tidy floral border and explode the ground beneath them. Although Stone opens by warning, “is true story doesn’t really have a happy ending,” Powers’s accompanying fairy tale–esque castle, adorned with scientific instruments, foreshadows a time in which readers are empowered to interrogate the historical record and reclaim the stories of little-heralded figures. An author’s note explains the Matilda Effect, a historical pattern in which men take credit for women’s work.