Kirkus Reviews QR Code
OCEAN SPEAKS by Jess Keating

OCEAN SPEAKS

How Marie Tharp Revealed the Ocean's Biggest Secret

by Jess Keating ; illustrated by Katie Hickey

Pub Date: June 30th, 2020
ISBN: 978-0-7352-6508-0
Publisher: Tundra Books

A scientific journey through sexism and across the ocean floor.

Marie Tharp (1920-2006) grew up fascinated with the natural world but as a girl was not allowed to study it. The accessible text focuses on general rather than specific historical detail but provides overall context; when war broke out and women were encouraged to learn about science, she welcomed the opportunity and eventually landed a job in a laboratory. As male scientists returned home, however, they were sent to do research while women such as Tharp were confined to desks. But Tharp was charged with creating a map of the ocean floor, a project that engaged her skills and imagination and led to her identification of a great rift, information that was initially dismissed as “girl-talk” and eventually revolutionized earth science. Engaging and inventive illustrations, including one fabulous foldout that depicts her expanding map, show her gradually becoming the skilled scientist and ocean cartographer she is recognized as today. Tharp presents white and race goes unmentioned, though there are darker-skinned people depicted in the background. The narrative doesn’t mention what Keating places in her author’s note: that when findings were first published, Tharp received little or no credit. Still this is a story that will doubtlessly inspire curiosity and consideration of the many forms of exploration and scientific inquiry while showing how one woman was able create new knowledge despite sexist constraints.

An intriguing tale of feminism, scientific exploration, imagination, focus, and resilience. 

(Q&A, further reading) (Picture book/biography. 6-10)