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Timothy Johnson's avatar

First, as a Swiftie, I can't pass up the bait you offered.

I won't try to claim that Taylor Swift is a scientific innovator. But she is an innovator in a lot of other ways, including being an amazing storyteller. Maybe she belongs in the section for "teaching ideas through stories"? I'm happy to drown you in examples... ;-)

On a different note, when you list the related patterns, can you add hyperlinks for the ones that have already been written? I think that would make these much easier to browse later.

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Kirsten Hill's avatar

Denise Gaskins has a lot of math book suggestions that would fall under the history/biography category (the books are organized by topic when you click on one of the age categories): https://denisegaskins.com/living-math-books/

There have been a lot of great math history videos on Veritasium in the past couple of years...it's a bummer he doesn't have them organized into a playlist. I'd say these are advanced middle school/high school level and up, though he is really great at making complex concepts understandable. https://www.youtube.com/@veritasium

Steven Strogratz's books (The Joy of X and Infinite Powers) are both really good and have a lot of history in them...Middle School and up (well, a middle schooler should be able to do all of Joy of X and at least understand about half of Infinite Powers...LOL... I think every high schooler about to take Calc should listen to Infinite Powers, because then they will understand what Calc is REALLY about, rather than just all the techniques and formulas you learn in class).

Out of print but an old favorite of mine is Asimov on Numbers by Isaac Asimov. Not all the essays are historical, but a lot of them are.

I have a couple of vintage series I like for science biographies... The Immortals of Science series and the Messner Shelf of Biographies (Messner isn't all science books - it's all kinds of bios).

Immortals of Science on LibraryThing: https://www.librarything.com/nseries/24675/Immortals-of-Science

This is probably the best list of the Messners: https://www.biblioguides.com/pub/series/messner-biographies (I have a personal list I've made of all the ones that are about scientists, which I can give to anyone who wants it, but I've only read about 3 of them so far).

So far in my experience, Immortals is the slightly drier of the two series, but can still be pretty good. Alessandro Volta and the Electric Battery was a great jumping off point for studying the topic of electricity.

We just finished reading Copernicus by Henry Thomas (Messner Shelf of Biographies) and it was really fascinating. I think we'll do a bio of Kepler after Christmas break. The Messners are very readable, but are a bit more in the "lightly fictionalized" style of biography with dialog.

Any readers ok with a religious perspective should check out the "Exploring the World of..." series by John Hudson Tiner. They are more textbooky but still a good resource, and I like that they are organized by topic (chemistry, biology, math, etc). They are very much in the vein of looking at the history of various discoveries.

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