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Breaking Through The Clouds: Sometimes Turbulent Life of Meteorologist Joanne Simpson
Barnes and Noble
Breaking Through The Clouds: Sometimes Turbulent Life of Meteorologist Joanne Simpson
Current price: $19.99
Barnes and Noble
Breaking Through The Clouds: Sometimes Turbulent Life of Meteorologist Joanne Simpson
Current price: $19.99
Size: Hardcover
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Writer Sandra Nickel and illustrator Helena Perez Garcia’s
Breaking Through the Clouds
is an inspiring picture book biography about the meteorologist whose discoveries helped us understand how weather works.
When Joanne Simpson (1923–2010) was a girl, she sailed her boat beneath the puffy white clouds of Cape Cod. As a pilot, she flew her plane so high, its wings almost touched them. And when World War II began and Joanne moved to the University of Chicago, a professor asked her to teach Air Force officers about those very clouds and the weather-changing winds. As soon as the war ended, Joanne decided to seriously study the clouds she had grown to love so much. Her professors laughed. They told her to go home. They told her she was no longer needed. They told her, “No woman ever got a doctorate in meteorology. And no woman ever will.”
But Joanne was stubborn. She sold her boat. She flew her last flight. She saved her money so that she could study clouds. She worked so hard and discovered so much that—despite what the professors said—she received a doctorate in meteorology. She was the first woman in the world to do so.
tells the story of a trailblazing scientist whose discoveries about clouds and how they work changed everything we know about weather today.
Breaking Through the Clouds
is an inspiring picture book biography about the meteorologist whose discoveries helped us understand how weather works.
When Joanne Simpson (1923–2010) was a girl, she sailed her boat beneath the puffy white clouds of Cape Cod. As a pilot, she flew her plane so high, its wings almost touched them. And when World War II began and Joanne moved to the University of Chicago, a professor asked her to teach Air Force officers about those very clouds and the weather-changing winds. As soon as the war ended, Joanne decided to seriously study the clouds she had grown to love so much. Her professors laughed. They told her to go home. They told her she was no longer needed. They told her, “No woman ever got a doctorate in meteorology. And no woman ever will.”
But Joanne was stubborn. She sold her boat. She flew her last flight. She saved her money so that she could study clouds. She worked so hard and discovered so much that—despite what the professors said—she received a doctorate in meteorology. She was the first woman in the world to do so.
tells the story of a trailblazing scientist whose discoveries about clouds and how they work changed everything we know about weather today.