Lynn Gilbert's Blog
June 2, 2018
Featured on Q Daily
Thrilled that the portraits transcend culture and continents, and are featured by Q Daily.
Featured on The Eye of Photography
Thrilled to be sandwiched between great photographers like Richard Avedon and Imogen Cunningham in the AIPAD 2018 preview by The Eye of Photography.
Featured on The Washington Post's Photography Blog!
I'm honored that The Washington Post featured both the portraits and the book Particular Passions on Insight, their photography blog. You can find the original post here
AIPAD Show Frontispiece
As part of the installation at AIPAD, we created printed material to accompany the portraits, providing context and depth. Here is the frontispiece to the materials, introducing the women and the show.
May 29, 2018
July 7, 2017
Grace Murray Hopper - Free - A kindle top read
Grace Murray Hopper, a top Kindle Short Read.
Enjoy the short, (10 page) oral biography of Grace Murray Hopper, whose work with early computers transformed mathematical symbols into words, helping to usher in the era of technology.
Editorial Reviews
One of those rare, rare books that pick your life up, turn it around and point it in the right direction.
--K.T. Maclay
https://giveaway.amazon.com/p/e130f08...
#summerreading #reading #STEM
June 30, 2017
My Memory of Grace Murray Hopper
When I met Grace Murray Hopper in 1978 at the Pentagon, she had come out of retirement. I descended to her office in a freight elevator and walked down a long dimly lit corridor, where paint was peeling off the walls and golf carts were stacked with equipment.
The small ordinary door which opened onto her office, revealed a tiny space with two desks, one for her and one for her secretary. The shelves behind her desk were filled with books, a flag, a clock that went counter clockwise, and awards. One memento, a ceramic figurine, represented a gremlin that could get into computers. She found a moth in a machine and coined the term computer bug.
Several other cubicles were filled with a variety of computers, one large, others looking like typewriters. She showed me a picture of a 51-foot unit and said, “One day small computers will perform the same tasks as large ones.”
A strong, no-nonsense woman, dressed in a black pantsuit (unusual for women in the seventies) and with a net covering her neat white hair, Hopper was at ease, direct, and warm, with a faint smile. She spoke gently.
At the time the category “Women in Science” did not exist in the libraries and, of course, neither did the internet. I unearthed pioneering subjects in science by using the yellow pages and calling scientific associations and organizations.
Grace Murray Hopper’s brief oral biography is one of 42 chapters in my book “Women of Wisdom,” about women who blazed new paths in fields traditionally open only to men. At the end of our meeting, this extraordinary woman said, “Thank you for thinking of me.”
- Lynn Gilbert
Yale to honor Grace Murray Hopper
Read the article here.
September 26, 2013
Women of Wisdom: Talks with Women who Shaped Our Times

PARTICULAR PASSIONS recounts the rich oral histories of pioneering women of the twentieth century from the arts and sciences, athletics and law, mathematics and politics.
We share their journeys as they pursue successful paths with intelligence and determination, changing the world for the millions of women and men who were inspired by them.
These stories will captivate, educate, and inspire you. Please purchase these stories at Apple or Amazon.
September 6, 2013
Billie Jean King -- On Change

"People don’t change overnight. It doesn’t matter what the law says. You can have a civil rights act, you can make abortion legal, but you still have to deal with what people feel and think. And that’s what it’s all about. You slowly have to persuade people and hope they are reasonable enough to see things in a logical, objective way." Billie Jean King -- Particular Passions: Talks with Women Who Shaped Our Times. For a limited time -- enjoy the oral biography of Billie Jean King from her days on the court.


