My Remarkable Journey
Katherine Johnson with Joylette Hylick and Katherine Moore
Amistad, $25.99
Katherine Johnson became a household name circa 2016, when the bestselling book and Hollywood film Hidden Figures highlighted her role as a NASA mathematician during the space race (SN: 1/21/17, p. 28). Those works showcased JohnsonтАЩs ability to perform high-stakes calculations to send astronauts to space, all while she endured racism and sexism from her colleagues. But crunching numbers for NASA is only part of JohnsonтАЩs story. Her posthumous memoir, My Remarkable Journey, tells the rest (SN: 2/24/20).
Cowritten with two of her three daughters, JohnsonтАЩs memoir spends surprisingly little time explaining her work at NASA. Instead, the book focuses on JohnsonтАЩs personal life, including many experiences that reveal insight into the United StatesтАЩ tumultuous race relations in the 20th century.
Her account begins with her childhood in small-town West Virginia. Even then, JohnsonтАЩs thirst for knowledge was palpable: She snuck out to follow her older siblings to school, peppered her parents and teachers with questions, and counted everything in sight. While in college at West Virginia State University, Johnson decided she wanted to become a mathematician.
Readers quickly see the profound obstacles that faced educated Black people like Johnson. When she graduated in 1937 at age 18 with the highest GPA in her universityтАЩs history, Johnson had few employment opportunities. Her only job offer was a teaching gig at an all-Black elementary school.
Johnson uses her own educational and work experiences as windows into broader issues. She frequently pivots from her story to describe her teachersтАЩ race-based struggles and the history of the Black schools she attended or served. These asides slow the narrative but reveal something deeper: JohnsonтАЩs immense pride in Black educational institutions and her gratitude to the Black educators who were her role models.
Later chapters continue zooming out from JohnsonтАЩs own experiences to historic events. She describes her concerns about allowing her daughters to participate in school integration. тАЬOnce IтАЩd seen what those Negro teenagers experienced in Little Rock, I couldnтАЩt unsee it,тАЭ she writes of the white mob violence faced by Black students integrating into a white school in Arkansas. She also advised her daughters not to participate in civil rights protests because she was afraid of them getting hurt or arrested. (They protested anyway.)
At times, however, JohnsonтАЩs historical asides seem purely expositional. Readers may wish that the memoir directly offered JohnsonтАЩs unique perspective on some issues. For instance, she describes a protest led by Rev. Ralph Abernathy тАФ Martin Luther King Jr.тАЩs successor as president of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference тАФ in objection to the taxpayer dollars spent on the space race rather than poverty relief. But Johnson doesnтАЩt share her own reactions to this event.
ItтАЩs also clear that Johnson isnтАЩt comfortable bragging about herself. She touts the careers of other accomplished Black scientists and astronauts, but of her own work, she writes, тАЬI was just doing [my] job.тАЭ That might seem like false modesty, but it rings true coming from a woman who didnтАЩt invite her own daughters to her retirement luncheon at NASA because, as she writes in the book, she тАЬdidnтАЩt want to make a big fuss.тАЭ
Perhaps more striking than JohnsonтАЩs unwavering humility is how she faced segregation and discrimination with her head held high. When she moved to the South for her first job, her mother warned her about the racism she would face: тАЬRemember, youтАЩre going to Virginia.тАЭ But Johnson just said, тАЬWell, tell them IтАЩm coming!тАЭ And when a white friend told Johnson that his pastor forbade Black guests at his wedding, тАЬI just shrugged it off,тАЭ she writes. тАЬI was not going to allow his pastorтАЩs backward views to change my opinion of the lovely couple.тАЭ
These examples of relentless determination in the face of adversity linger with the reader, showing what truly makes JohnsonтАЩs journey remarkable. Yes, her mathematical genius was inspiring. Equally inspiring was her grit.
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