Families who loved The Woman in the Moon: How Margaret Hamilton Helped Fly the First Astronauts to the Moon by Richard Maurer often look for books with a similar feel. These 20 recommendations were selected for their similarity in style, theme, and reading level.

Reach for this book when your child is grappling with feeling like an outsider or needs to see that 'perfection' in STEM is actually built through trial, error, and immense grit. While many space books focus on the astronauts, this biography highlights Margaret Hamilton, the visionary software engineer whose work was the invisible backbone of the Apollo 11 mission. It is an ideal choice for a middle-schooler who enjoys technical details but also needs a boost in self-confidence. The narrative follows Margaret's journey from a curious student to the lead engineer at MIT's Instrumentation Lab. It tackles themes of resilience and gender bias in the 1960s workplace without being heavy-handed. For parents, this is a tool to discuss the value of hard work and the importance of advocating for one's own ideas, even in rooms where you are the only one who looks like you. At 272 pages with technical sidebars, it is best suited for readers aged 10 to 14 who are ready for a sophisticated, immersive biography.