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  1. In 2015, at the age of 97, Katherine Johnson became a global celebrity. President Barack Obama awarded her the prestigious Presidential Medal of Freedom--the nation's highest civilian honor--for her pioneering work as a mathematician on NASA's first flights into space.

  2. May 25, 2021 · Katherine G. Johnson, Joylette Hylick, Katherine G. Moore. The remarkable woman at heart of the smash New York Times bestseller and Oscar-winning film Hidden Figures tells the full story of her life, including what it took to work at NASA, help land the first man on the moon, and live through a century of turmoil and change.

    • (2K)
    • Paperback
  3. May 28, 2021 · Review by Lisa Page. May 29, 2021 at 7:00 a.m. EDT. I’m not good at math. As a kid, algebra destroyed me; geometry put the nails in the coffin. I graduated from high school, grateful that my ...

  4. May 25, 2021 · The book was completed after Johnson’s passing in February 2020 at the age of 101, co-written with her daughters Joylette Hylick and Katherine Moore. Johnson is one of the Black women who helped ...

  5. May 24, 2021 · Now comes Katherine Johnson's essential memoir, My Remarkable Journey, available May 25, which she collaborated on with one of her daughters and two other writers. My Remarkable Journey encompasses the events of WWII and the advent of the civil rights movement, as well as many other of history's big moments, seen through Johnson's singular ...

    • Amistad Press
    • 2 min
  6. May 25, 2021 · Katherine Johnson, whose math helped land a man on the moon, dies at 101. MARCH 1, 202002:29. Many of the lesser-known aspects of their mother’s life are detailed in Johnson’s posthumous memoir, “My Remarkable Journey,” released Tuesday. Johnson was born in 1918 in West Virginia and graduated from college at 18 years old.

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  8. Jun 9, 2021 · The book was written with her daughters Joylette Hylick and Katherine Moore and completed by them after Johnson's death. The memoir offers a more personal perspective on the story first made famous by Margot Lee Shetterley's book. Johnson discusses some of the disparities between her life and what we saw on screen.

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