A Woman’s Place Is in the Lab: A Review of Ada Byron Lovelace and the Thinking Machine

61565z9a6VL._SX258_BO1,204,203,200_Many will be surprised to know that the inventor of computer programming was a woman—Ada Byron Lovelace. In her debut picture book biography, Ada Byron Lovelace and the Thinking Machine (Creston, 2015) author Laurie Wallmark offers young readers an engaging profile of the young scientist, the daughter of Lord Byron whose “scandalous behavior” led her mother to leave with her when she was a baby. While Lord Byron was a famous poet, Ada, like her mother, was fascinated with mathematics. She created a model sailboat to learn how wings could keep a flying machine aloft. When blinded and unable to walk due to measles, she solved increasingly difficult mathematical problems in her head. At the age of 17, she met Charles Babbage at a party and ended up writing a algorithm to power his great invention, a mechanical calculator.

April Chu’s illustrations are rich in detail, with tones that capture the nineteenth century setting and the lives of English nobility at the time. The protagonist’s facial expressions convey the joy she felt at inventing things and solving problems. They are a perfect complement for a text that makes Ada Byron Lovelace’s achievements understandable to young readers, who will be inspired by this portrayal of her enthusiasm, curiosity, and persistence. Three pages of back matter include a more detailed explanation of her work with computers, a list of nicknames bestowed on her during her lifetime and afterward, a timeline of her life (she, sadly, died of cancer in 1852 at the age of the age of 36, and a bibliography of books for both children and adults.

Ada Byron Lovelace’s remarkable life is the subject of growing number of books for readers of all ages. Wallmark and Chu have made an important contribution with this clearly written and appealing picture book for the youngest readers.

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