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  1. Sep 8, 2016 · “These women were both ordinary and they were extraordinary,” says Margot Lee Shetterly. Her new book Hidden Figures shines light on the inner details of these women’s lives and...

  2. Personal life. Margot Lee married Aran Shetterly, a writer and historian. [10] Works. Hidden Figures: The Story of the African-American Women Who Helped Win the Space Race. William Morrow/HarperCollins, 2016. ISBN 9780062363596. NASA-Langley Women's History Month 2014 Keynote: "Hidden Figures: The Female Mathematicians of NACA and NASA"

  3. She is a native of Hampton, Virginia, where she knew many of the women behind the history in Hidden Figures. She lived for many years in New York and Mexico before moving to Charlottesville, Virginia, where she lives with her husband, writer Aran Shetterly.

  4. Sep 7, 2016 · These very intimate accounts provided the pages a very deep understanding of the dedication and strength of these women. “Hidden Figures,” as a project, is the revelation of those previously unrecognized women. It reads like a family history for distant cousins who don’t come around too often.

  5. Sep 19, 2016 · In Hidden Figures: The Story of the African-American Women Who Helped Win the Space Race (public library), Margot Lee Shetterly tells the untold story of these brilliant women, once on the frontlines of our cultural leaps and since sidelined by the selective collective memory we call history.

  6. Oct 25, 2016 · Shetterly: Dorothy Vaughan, Mary Jackson, Katherine Johnson and Christine Darden — each of them represented a certain slice of the narrative in terms of the development of women in the...

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  8. Margot Lee Shetterly (Com ’91) at her home in Charlottesville Matt Eich. They were in her church, in her mother’s sorority and with her father in the National Technical Association, the country’s oldest African-American technical organization.

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