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The Girl Who Built an Ocean

An Artist, an Argonaut, and the True Story of the World's First Aquarium

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
The inspiring tale of a seamstress-turned-scientist who invented the world's first aquarium at a time when women in STEM were startlingly rare.
The daughter of a seamstress and a cobbler, Jeanne Villepreux-Power began her career as a dressmaker, sewing beautiful gowns for the Parisian aristocracy. But her heart longed for more, and when she moved to the seaside, she became fascinated by the ocean's mysteries.
 
She filled her pockets with seashells and specimens, and filled her notebooks with oservations about coral and crustaceans and all manner of marine life. The argonaut interested her most of all, but Jeanne's observations of this shy creature were confounded by its tendency to swim away when approached. Jeanne wanted a way to bring a piece of the ocean home with her, and that's she came to build the world's first aquarium—an invention that would pave the way for countless scientific discoveries in the years to come...
 
Jess Keating (Shark Lady) and Michelle Mee Nutter (Allergic) bring Jeanne's story vividly to life with lively text and vibrant artwork that captures the curiosity and perseverance this pioneering woman in science brought to everything she did.
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  • Reviews

    • School Library Journal

      July 15, 2022

      Gr 1-4-Meet the inventor of the first aquarium, 19th-century designer Jeanne Villepreux. Born in France, Villepreux trained as a dressmaker and embroiderer, gaining a great deal of respect for her beautiful work, including the wedding dress of a princess. After she married, she and her husband moved to Sicily, where she found herself entranced by the sea life. Seeking to study ocean animals more closely, Villepreux designed a glass box to observe creatures in their native water habitats. With her aquariums, she was able to make some interesting observations about argonauts, a kind of a squid with a shell. Many in the male-dominated scientific community dismissed her; but over time, her work was proven factual and people outside the scientific community found applications for her aquarium. The artwork is colorful and inviting. While the faces of people are cartoonish, other aspects of the illustrations are more realistic, giving the book an intellectual heft. The endpapers are a compelling array of dressmaking tools and ocean life samples that tie the two important pieces of Villepreux's life together. This book will help students connect to different topics-women's studies, inventors, 19th-century innovations, and biography. VERDICT Excellent nonfiction in an interesting and beautiful book that gives readers many points of interest for entry, with detailed pictures to pore over.-Debbie Tanner

      Copyright 2022 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Kirkus

      September 1, 2022
      Science and fashion meet in this portrait of a 19th-century seamstress whose fascination with ocean life led both to multiple discoveries and to the invention of the glass-sided aquarium. In the wake of Ocean Speaks (2020), illustrated by Katie Hickey, a profile of pioneering oceanographer Marie Tharp, Keating introduces another woman in marine science who was strong minded enough to torpedo sexist expectations. Folding lyrical touches into her measured account, the author follows Jeanne Villepreux as she learns how to use her hands to "transform a pile of nothing into a beautiful...something" in her parents' dressmaking shop, then goes on to a successful career making high-society gowns in Paris before a move to Sicily (with "her fabric, her scissors, and her new husband") sparks a second career studying the wildlife in the nearby shallows. Frustrated by the challenge of getting her specimens to hold still while she draws them, she constructs a waterproof glass box--and so becomes the first to discover that argonauts, a type of octopus, don't steal their delicate shells from other creatures as was widely supposed but manufacture them, likewise "transforming what appeared to be nothing...into a beautiful something." Nutter's appropriately flowing illustrations take their smiling, self-possessed subject from ball gowns and formal dances to sandy beaches and work benches. Villepreux herself is White; montage sequences of colleagues worldwide receiving news of her discoveries feature both White and dark-skinned naturalists, including several other women. An afterword with a timeline fills in further detail about both the inventor and her eight-armed subjects. (This book was reviewed digitally.) A STEM-winder's delight, awash in affirmation and the joy of discovery. (Picture-book biography. 7-10)

      COPYRIGHT(2022) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      October 1, 2022
      Preschool-Grade 3 Born in 1794, Jeanne Villepreux-Power grew up watching her father transform leather into shoes, and her mother create beautiful gowns. Jeanne worked as a dressmaker in Paris as a young woman, but after marrying a wealthy man and moving to Sicily, she became fascinated by the Mediterranean and its sea animals. Frustrated that she could not watch them within their habitats, she invented the first aquarium. Her observations and drawings of young argonauts growing from eggs in her aquarium challenged the accepted theory that these small octopuses used shells from other creatures, as hermit crabs do. Though in her lifetime her research was often dismissed by the male-dominated nineteenth-century scientific community, the significance of her work is widely recognized today. Nutter's colorful, digital pictures illustrate Villepreux-Power's story and her times in an appealing way. Like Keating's previous picture-book biographies, Shark Lady (2017) and Ocean Speaks (2020), which introduce shark scientist Eugenie Clark and seafloor cartographer Marie Tharp, the book offers an interesting, accessible narrative tracing the life story of a woman who made a contribution to science.

      COPYRIGHT(2022) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      October 24, 2022
      This aquatic biography foregrounds the inventiveness of 19th-century seamstress-turned-scientist Jeanne Villepreux-Power (1794–1871). The figure has a successful career dressmaking for socialites in France, but after a move to Sicily, her focus shifts to the Mediterranean’s “enchanting world of saltwater and sand,” where her fascination motivates her to develop glass aquariums to aid her study. Keating draws a clear line between Villepreux-Power’s two occupations: “Chiffon and taffeta shifted into the foam at her feet as she walked in the sand. Pearls and sequins echoed the dappled sunlight on the horizon.” When Villepreux-Power’s observations show that female argonauts grow, rather than find, their shells, text skips the science to emphasize the marine animal’s kindred gift for creation. Mee Nutter’s smooth, animation-style digital art highlights the protagonist’s curiosity with scenes of her at work amid specimen-filled environments. Back matter includes an author’s note and timeline. Ages 4–8.

Formats

  • Kindle Book
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Kindle restrictions

Languages

  • English

Levels

  • Lexile® Measure:820
  • Text Difficulty:3-4

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