Gladys’s mind swirls with numbers and shapes as the world enters the high-tech space age. This is the lyrical true story of a groundbreaking Black mathematician whose inventions led to the creation of GPS.
Little Gladys is a farm girl who loves math. But as a Black kid growing up in Virginia in the mid-twentieth century, she sees life around her as less than or greater than but never equal. When a teacher calls her “college material,” Gladys knows she can achieve her dreams—and goes on to get a higher education and land a job calculating trajectories and orbits at a naval base with only four Black employees. To help space rockets land safely, Gladys uses satellites to create a better model of Earth, which looks more like a lumpy potato from Gladys’s childhood than a perfect sphere! Gladys’s amazing work eventually leads to the creation of GPS, which now lets people everywhere navigate our uneven planet. Effervescent illustrations enhance the true story of this remarkable woman who paved the way for future thinkers and innovators. Back matter includes a biography, timeline, author’s note, references, and even a section on lumpy potato science!
SELECTION
| 2026 Junior Library Guild Selection
Ainissa Ramirez is a scientist and science communicator and the author of the first book in the Black Innovators series, Spark: Jim West’s Electrifying Adventures in Creating the Microphone, illustrated by Setor Fiadzigbey. She dreamed of becoming a scientist when she was a little girl. She earned her doctorate in materials science from Stanford, worked at Bell Labs, and taught mechanical engineering at Yale. Ainissa Ramirez lives in Connecticut.
Tamisha Anthony is the illustrator of Seoul Food by Erin Danielle Russell, Sparrow Loves Birds by Murry Burgess, and On Our Way! What a Day! by JaNay Brown-Wood. She writes and illustrates “Spilling the Tea with T” for Uppercase magazine. When she isn’t illustrating, you can find her joyfully swing dancing with her husband, gardening, or singing jazz standards. Tamisha Anthony lives in Texas.
Gladys’s mind swirls with numbers and shapes as the world enters the high-tech space age. This is the lyrical true story of a groundbreaking Black mathematician whose inventions led to the creation of GPS.
Little Gladys is a farm girl who loves math. But as a Black kid growing up in Virginia in the mid-twentieth century, she sees life around her as less than or greater than but never equal. When a teacher calls her “college material,” Gladys knows she can achieve her dreams—and goes on to get a higher education and land a job calculating trajectories and orbits at a naval base with only four Black employees. To help space rockets land safely, Gladys uses satellites to create a better model of Earth, which looks more like a lumpy potato from Gladys’s childhood than a perfect sphere! Gladys’s amazing work eventually leads to the creation of GPS, which now lets people everywhere navigate our uneven planet. Effervescent illustrations enhance the true story of this remarkable woman who paved the way for future thinkers and innovators. Back matter includes a biography, timeline, author’s note, references, and even a section on lumpy potato science!
Awards
SELECTION
| 2026 Junior Library Guild Selection
Author
Ainissa Ramirez is a scientist and science communicator and the author of the first book in the Black Innovators series, Spark: Jim West’s Electrifying Adventures in Creating the Microphone, illustrated by Setor Fiadzigbey. She dreamed of becoming a scientist when she was a little girl. She earned her doctorate in materials science from Stanford, worked at Bell Labs, and taught mechanical engineering at Yale. Ainissa Ramirez lives in Connecticut.
Tamisha Anthony is the illustrator of Seoul Food by Erin Danielle Russell, Sparrow Loves Birds by Murry Burgess, and On Our Way! What a Day! by JaNay Brown-Wood. She writes and illustrates “Spilling the Tea with T” for Uppercase magazine. When she isn’t illustrating, you can find her joyfully swing dancing with her husband, gardening, or singing jazz standards. Tamisha Anthony lives in Texas.