cover image Pirate Queens: Dauntless Women Who Dared to Rule the High Seas

Pirate Queens: Dauntless Women Who Dared to Rule the High Seas

Leigh Lewis, illus. by Sara Gómez Woolley. National Geographic, $18.99 (64p) ISBN 978-1-4263-7195-0

Reminding readers that “women have made their mark in every area throughout time,” Lewis (It’s Not the Puppy) sails into treacherous waters with this ode to women across the globe who ruled the high seas from 520 BCE to 1844 CE. Noting that women turned to piracy for reasons “as varied and complex as the women themselves,” the text cites “greed, adventure, pride, revenge, love, nationalism, and sometimes just the lack of any other option.” Beginning with Artemisia of Caria, who alternated flying Greek and Persian flags depending on whom she wanted to raid, the narrative also includes Sayyida al Hurra, a Moroccan ruler who sought vengeance after her family’s expulsion by raiding Christian ships, and Ching Shih, who helmed a pirate empire that faced the Chinese navy. Lewis combines poetry with prose, introducing each new historical figure in a different verse form, from double sonnet to ghazal. Choppy blocks of text can make the historical narrative hard to follow, but sidebars offer historical facts and trivia alongside photographs and ephemera. Woolley’s (Charlotte and the Quiet Place) digital illustrations in the style of classic comics highlight an ethnically inclusive selection of real-life women who commanded ships, wielded cutlasses, and struck fear into the hearts of others. Ages 8–12. (Jan.)