Through the telescope Mae Jemison dreams of space

Charles R. Smith, 1969-

Book - 2025

"Explore the wonders of the universe in this mesmerizing, poetic ode to trailblazing astronaut Mae Jemison, from Coretta Scott King Honor author Charles R. Smith, Jr.How far to the stars?This is what a little girl named Mae Jemison wonders as she peers through her telescope and dreams of space. Someday she will make it there, but for now she wonders, she learns, and she is inspired by the vastness of the universe.Astronaut, physician, and engineer Mae Jemison's passion would eventually lead to her becoming the first Black woman in space!Through the Telescope focuses on what first inspired a young Mae Jemison to reach for the stars. Charles R. Smith, Jr. is the award-winning author of Coretta Scott King Honor Book, Twelve Rounds of... Glory, and many other popular and acclaimed titles. His gorgeous text places a spotlight on an American trailblazer who inspires kids everywhere to follow their dreams. Debut illustrator Evening Monteiro's captivating portrayal of a young Mae Jemison is sure to grab young reader's attention!Perfect for kids who love space exploration and for readers of Hidden Figures and The Undefeated"--

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

In Chicago there lives a girl named Mae whose sights are set on the stars. Mae Jemison peers through a telescope and wonders about outer space. Her dreams take her floating past passenger jets and through the stratosphere until she's suspended in space among the universe's estimated hundreds of billions of galaxies. She perches on a shooting star and rides it as far as a light-year, which she calculates is about six trillion miles. Reflected in the telescope's lens, Mae sees her future self: a bold astronaut on a daring spacewalk. Backmatter highlights many of Mae's accomplishments in bite-size blurbs, including her groundbreaking achievement of becoming the first Black female astronaut to travel into space. Smith's story is fueled by rhyming verse whose rhythm is sometimes unsteady, making for a choppy read-aloud in spite of several very well-paced moments. Monteiro has rendered their eye-catching digital illustrations in a limited palette of the blacks, blues, and gleaming yellows of deep space, balancing futurism and whimsy. Not so much a biography as a snapshot of one curious girl's astronomical wonder, this book leans more on space facts than on Mae's life, so readers curious about the trailblazer herself will need to search elsewhere. A dreamy tale of space flight to set aspiring astronauts' minds whirling.(Informational picture book. 5-8) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.