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Wanda Hears the Stars
Written by Amy Hansen and Wanda Díaz Merced
Illustrated by Rocío Arreola Mendoza
Watertown, MA: Charlesbridge, 2025. Biography.

Growing up in Puerto Rico, Wanda Díaz Merced wanted to study the stars. But when she lost her sight, she had to find a new way to work. Through the use of sonification, which turns data into sound, she was able to make a path for herself and other scientists with disabilities. --Publisher

Written by Jacqueline Mitton
Illustrated by Christina Balit
Washington, D.C.: National Geographic Society, 1998. Informational.

Brilliantly colored paintings illustrate this introduction to constellations and the animals which ancient stargazers imagined as they made their observations of the night sky. --Editor

Written by James Gladstone
Illustraded by Yaara Eshet
Berkeley, CA: Owlkids Books, 2023. Informational.

The supernova of 1054 was one of the brightest supernova events recorded in history. And its remnant, the Crab Nebula, is still studied today. Beginning at the moment of a supernova explosion thousands of years ago, this story travels forward in time to 1054, the year people around the world saw the unparalleled light of an exploding star appear in Earth's sky. The story then travels deep into space to see the remnant of this supernova--the Crab Nebula--followed by a continuing trip forward in time. --Editor

By Jason Chin
New York: Holiday House, 2020. Informational.

A non-fiction introduction to the massive scale of the known universe. --Publisher

By Jessie Hartland
Maplewood, NJ: Blue Apple Books, 2013. Informational.

This nonfiction book for elementary-school-age children details the steps that brought a meteor from outer space, across the eastern US, to the roof of a car in Peekskill, New York, and thereafter to be verified, tested, and exhibited at the American Museum of Natural History. --Publisher


Written by Steve Parker
Illustrated by John Haslam
Irvine, CA: QEB Publishing, 2015. Informational.

Have you ever wondered what's in space? Take a journey through the solar system and beyond to discover the secrets of our amazing universe. --Publisher

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