Maia Weinstock is an editor, writer, and producer of science and children's media whose work has appeared in Scientific American, Discover, SPACE.com, BrainPOP, and Scholastic's Science World. She is Deputy Editorial Director at MIT News, a lecturer at MIT on the history of women in STEM, and creator of LEGO's ""Women of NASA.""
A striking portrait of a brilliant mind...This is a fascinating introduction to a game-changing figure. -Publishers Weekly, STARRED review With Carbon Queen, Weinstock does more than tell the story of a brilliant scientist's life; she transports you into a world of curiosity and wonder, driven by enthusiasm and persistence. It's a world that I certainly want to be part of. -Physics World In Carbon Queen, Weinstock has pieced together Dresselhaus's story using decades of profiles, print interviews, oral histories conducted with the scientist herself, and new interviews with her contemporaries...Readers are also left with vivid images of the woman herself, as a child on her way to music school; as a high-spirited teen, sneaking friends into the Hayden Planetarium; and finally as a trailblazing scientist who, politely but always with great effect, gave the academy hell for its dismal track record with women. -Science Carbon Queen is Maia Weinstock's account of the remarkable life of nanoscience pioneer Mildred Dresselhaus, who, from the 1950s, defied society's expectations of women to become an influential scientist and engineer. - New Scientist When the mathematically gifted but impecunious Mildred Spiewak launched her academic career at Hunter College in 1948, she aimed at no more than qualifying for something better than work in a zipper factory. In chronicling the stunningly successful path that Spiewak subsequently traversed as a research scientist, Weinstock leaves readers grateful that this gifted woman found settings far better than a zipper factory. We see how-before Spiewak joined her life, her career, and her name to those of her husband, solid-state theorist Gene Dresselhaus-she found her own footing as a fearless female scientist under the mentorship of Rosalyn Sussman Yalow, Nobel laureate in medicine. Though Weinstock takes readers into some of the scientific complexities behind the revolutionary carbon nanotubes that Mildred Dresselhaus developed, she also brings into view the exceptionally multivalent personal relationships Dresselhaus fashioned while bearing and caring for four children. Readers see how the same energy and intellectual resourcefulness that enabled Dresselhaus to perceive previously undetected structural characteristics of graphite also helped her envision and create an academic environment more open to and more supportive of women, especially those from ethnic minorities. An exceptional biography showcasing the achievements of a brilliant scientist who broadened the range of the possible for women. - Booklist, STARRED review This lovely biography is completely accessible to non-scientists. It both tells the story of a remarkable scientist and makes a larger point about the perils of overlooking women in science. -The Christian Century