
The Radium Girls
The Dark Story of America’s Shining Women
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Narrated by:
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Angela Brazil
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By:
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Kate Moore
About this listen
The year was 1917. As a war raged across the world, young American women flocked to work, painting watches, clocks, and military dials with a special luminous substance made from radium. It was a fun job, lucrative and glamorous - the girls themselves shone brightly in the dark, covered head to toe in the dust from the paint. They were the radium girls.
As the years passed, the women began to suffer from mysterious and crippling illnesses. The very thing that had made them feel alive - their work - was in fact slowly killing them: They had been poisoned by the radium paint. Yet their employers denied all responsibility. And so, in the face of unimaginable suffering - in the face of death - these courageous women refused to accept their fate quietly and instead became determined to fight for justice.
Drawing on previously unpublished sources - including diaries, letters, and court transcripts as well as original interviews with the women's relatives - The Radium Girls is an intimate narrative account of an unforgettable true story. It is the powerful tale of a group of ordinary women from the Roaring 20s who themselves learned how to roar.
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Story
Her name was Henrietta Lacks, but scientists know her as HeLa. She was a poor Southern tobacco farmer who worked the same land as her slave ancestors, yet her cells - taken without her knowledge - became one of the most important tools in medicine: The first “immortal” human cells grown in culture, which are still alive today, though she has been dead for more than 60 years. HeLa cells were vital for developing the polio vaccine; uncovered secrets of cancer, viruses, and the atom bomb’s effects.
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The Secret Life of an American Cancer Cell
- By Cynthia on 08-10-13
By: Rebecca Skloot
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Exposure
- Poisoned Water, Corporate Greed, and One Lawyer's Twenty-Year Battle Against DuPont
- By: Robert Bilott
- Narrated by: Jeremy Bobb, Mark Ruffalo - Introduction
- Length: 14 hrs and 51 mins
- Unabridged
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Silent Spring meets Erin Brockovich in this eye-opening, riveting true story of the lawyer who spent two decades building a case against DuPont for its use of the hazardous, unregulated chemical PFOA, uncovering a history of environmental contamination that affects virtually every person on the planet, and the heartless behavior that kept it a secret for 60 years.
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Tenacious
- By Gary S. on 01-02-20
By: Robert Bilott
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When Women Ruled the World
- By: Kara Cooney
- Narrated by: Kara Cooney
- Length: 9 hrs and 15 mins
- Unabridged
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This riveting narrative explores the lives of six remarkable female pharaohs, from Hatshepsut to Cleopatra - women who ruled with real power - and shines a piercing light on our own perceptions of women in power today. Female rulers are a rare phenomenon - but thousands of years ago in ancient Egypt, women reigned supreme. But throughout human history, women in positions of power were more often used as political pawns in a male-dominated society. What was so special about ancient Egypt that provided women this kind of access to the highest political office?
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A Thoroughly Feminist Review of Ancient Egypt
- By Morgan on 03-07-19
By: Kara Cooney
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The Black Angels
- The Untold Story of the Nurses Who Helped Cure Tuberculosis
- By: Maria Smilios
- Narrated by: Gina Daniels
- Length: 12 hrs and 13 mins
- Unabridged
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During those dark pre-antibiotic days, when tuberculosis killed one in seven people, white nurses at Sea View, New York’s largest municipal hospital, began quitting. Desperate to avert a public health crisis, city officials summoned Black southern nurses, luring them with promises of good pay, a career, and an escape from the strictures of Jim Crow. But after arriving, they found themselves on an isolated hilltop in the remote borough of Staten Island, yet again confronting racism and consigned to a woefully understaffed facility, dubbed “the pest house” where “no one left alive.”
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Tons of amazing medical American/black history that easily reads like your favorite novel.
- By Infowiz on 01-31-24
By: Maria Smilios
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Midnight in Chernobyl
- By: Adam Higginbotham
- Narrated by: Jacques Roy
- Length: 13 hrs and 55 mins
- Unabridged
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April 25, 1986 in Chernobyl was a turning point in world history. The disaster not only changed the world’s perception of nuclear power and the science that spawned it, but also our understanding of the planet’s delicate ecology. With the images of the abandoned homes and playgrounds beyond the barbed wire of the 30-kilometer Exclusion Zone, the rusting graveyards of contaminated trucks and helicopters, the farmland lashed with black rain, the event fixed for all time the notion of radiation as an invisible killer.
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Midnight in Chernobyl is the book to listen to.
- By NH on 03-21-19
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Radioactive
- Marie & Pierre Curie: A Tale of Love and Fallout
- By: Lauren Redniss
- Narrated by: Nicola Barber
- Length: 2 hrs and 5 mins
- Unabridged
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Radioactive is the mesmerizing, landmark biography of Marie Curie, by acclaimed author and artist Lauren Redniss. Through brilliant storytelling, Redniss walks us through Curie’s life, which was marked by extraordinary scientific discovery and dramatic personal trauma - from her complex working and romantic relationship with Pierre Curie, to their discovery of two new scientific elements, to Pierre’s tragic death, to Marie’s two Nobel Prizes.
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Apparantly, the paper version is a graphic book.
- By Marlita on 03-23-21
By: Lauren Redniss
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The Girls of Atomic City
- The Untold Story of the Women Who Helped Win World War II
- By: Denise Kiernan
- Narrated by: Cassandra Campbell
- Length: 12 hrs and 51 mins
- Unabridged
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At the height of World War II, Oak Ridge, Tennessee, was home to 75,000 residents, consuming more electricity than New York City. But to most of the world, the town did not exist. Thousands of civilians - many of them young women from small towns across the South - were recruited to this secret city, enticed by solid wages and the promise of war-ending work. Kept very much in the dark, few would ever guess the true nature of the tasks they performed each day in the hulking factories in the middle of the Appalachian Mountains.
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Important story of this secret city
- By CBlox on 11-14-13
By: Denise Kiernan
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A Rome of One's Own
- The Forgotten Women of the Roman Empire
- By: Emma Southon
- Narrated by: Danielle Cohen
- Length: 14 hrs
- Unabridged
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A Rome of One’s Own is a retelling of the history of Rome with the Important Things, but also all the things Roman history writers relegate to the background—or designate as domestic, feminine, or worthless. This is a history of individuals, twenty-one women who span the length of its territory and its centuries, who caused outrage, led armies in rebellion, wrote poetry, lived independently or under the thumb of emperors. A Rome of One’s Own highlights women overlooked and misunderstood, and through them offers a fascinating and groundbreaking chronicle of the ancient world.
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Excellent stories, needlessly foul language
- By ShamaLambaDingDong on 04-14-24
By: Emma Southon
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The Lobotomist
- A Maverick Medical Genius and His Tragic Quest to Rid the World of Mental Illness
- By: Jack El-Hai
- Narrated by: Peter Lerman
- Length: 15 hrs and 40 mins
- Unabridged
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The Lobotomist explores one of the darkest chapters of American medicine: the desperate attempt to treat the hundreds of thousands of psychiatric patients in need of help during the middle decades of the 20th century. Into this crisis stepped Walter Freeman, MD, who saw a solution in lobotomy, a brain operation intended to reduce the severity of psychotic symptoms. Drawing on Freeman's documents and interviews with Freeman's family, Jack El-Hai takes a penetrating look at the life and work of this complex scientific genius.
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Very forgiving portrait
- By Soupy on 12-01-22
By: Jack El-Hai
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Women in White Coats
- How the First Women Doctors Changed the World of Medicine
- By: Olivia Campbell
- Narrated by: Jean Ann Douglass
- Length: 11 hrs and 29 mins
- Unabridged
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In the early 1900s, women were dying in large numbers from treatable diseases because they avoided receiving medical care. Examinations performed by male doctors were often demeaning and even painful. In addition, women faced stigma from illness—a diagnosis could greatly limit their ability to find husbands, jobs or be received in polite society. Motivated by personal loss and frustration over inadequate medical care, Elizabeth Blackwell, Lizzie Garret Anderson and Sophie Jex-Blake fought for a woman's place in the male-dominated medical field.
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Three courageous women you’ll be cheering on.
- By Maggie on 03-19-21
By: Olivia Campbell
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Poisoner in Chief
- Sidney Gottlieb and the CIA Search for Mind Control
- By: Stephen Kinzer
- Narrated by: James Linkin
- Length: 12 hrs and 17 mins
- Unabridged
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The visionary chemist Sidney Gottlieb was the CIA’s master magician and gentlehearted torturer - the agency’s “poisoner in chief.” As head of the MK-ULTRA mind control project, he directed brutal experiments at secret prisons on three continents. He made pills, powders, and potions that could kill or maim without a trace - including some intended for Fidel Castro and other foreign leaders. He paid prostitutes to lure clients to CIA-run bordellos, where they were secretly dosed with mind-altering drugs. His experiments spread LSD across the United States.
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Narration not great
- By VelvetLedbetter on 09-20-19
By: Stephen Kinzer
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We Wish to Inform You That Tomorrow We Will Be Killed with Our Families
- Stories from Rwanda
- By: Philip Gourevitch
- Narrated by: Philip Gourevitch
- Length: 10 hrs and 23 mins
- Unabridged
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An unforgettable firsthand account of a people's response to genocide and what it tells us about humanity. This remarkable audiobook chronicles what has happened in Rwanda and neighboring states since 1994, when the Rwandan government called on everyone in the Hutu majority to murder everyone in the Tutsi minority.
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Things you'd never imagine
- By LEE on 12-27-19
What listeners say about The Radium Girls
Highly rated for:
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- H
- 04-27-18
Those poor women didn’t deserve this
A gripping story of the poor women in the dial painting industry. I gritted my teeth through the horrible, robotic, almost condescending narrative style for a couple of hours. But I could not bear it any longer, I had to stop.
Those dial painting women faced many indignities in life and the horrible narration of this book is just one more.
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- Thomas Reid
- 06-18-17
loved the narrator!!!
loved it, such an interesting story! it inspired me to do research to learn more!
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2 people found this helpful
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- Fact addict
- 04-06-20
Curious date???
The projected publication of this book is Jan 1, 2200........ if that’s true, who’s the person who infiltrated the future to get this book and bring it to the 2020 date? I have noticed a large number of ‘future publications,’ on offer.
As to the book itself, it is so terribly sad, with the long list of destroyed bodies and lives. Industries, and the press, and ‘knowledgeable sources,’ kept reassuring the public that radium was completely safe. ... and then, women started dying, after terrible prolonged suffering.
This is the story of the women who became the first victims of radium poisoning.
So terribly sad, and so preventable...
As to the narrator, I think she must get credit for clarity, but multi-syllabic words are normally not pronounced with “ev-er-y sin-gle syl-la-ble au-da-ble.” Over pronunciation can be as much of a problem as slurring over syllables. Her accent is acceptable, but she needs a little more finesse with her multisyllabic words.
Sad, sad, story; all too frequent as to the type of problem that still occurs in today’s manufacturing and business culture.
Long awaited and not a disappointment.
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1 person found this helpful
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- Rachel
- 06-19-24
Interesting read
The book was very interesting. To see what those girls went through, all the pain and suffering was intense. Especially seeing as I grew up in Waterbury, CT where there was the Waterbury Clock Company that used radium to paint the dials and I had no idea this happened in my hometown. The only issue that I had was that the narrator’s voice felt computer generated and it made it hard to listen to. But other than that it was a good read.
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1 person found this helpful
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- northwoods woman
- 02-05-18
Awesome book, but narration is terrible
The story was awesome , but the narration worse than terrible. If I could have given the narration less than a one star I would have. Tragic story that is very well done. Sad part of our history .Hard to believe how work place in the past were not safe. I wish Audible would redo this book with a different narrator .
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- Lynn Hall
- 01-07-18
Fascinating read
This is a very interesting true story. The author captures the unsung spirit and determination of young women who were lied to and abused by their greedy employers. These women led the fight to change safety in the workplace. This is a story that is not well known, but should be.
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- Proud Aunty
- 03-06-18
important, moving story - awful narration
this book covers the human story of the women who worked with radium in the 1920s. it is very well written, moves at a good pace and brings to light an overlooked segment of our history. I gave the story 5 well-deserved Stars. the narration was bizzarre. it sounded like it was being read by a robot, with odd pauses and sudden burst of speed. I would recommend the book simply on the basis of the content and if the narrator is too annoying you can always return it since Audible has fantastic return policies.
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- TAB
- 06-01-19
Very good book!
I loved this story! A perfect mix of science, the girls lives and legal battles. I did not have issues with this narrator as some of the others have. Although, I did notice the occasional swallowing. I highly recommend this book if you enjoy learning about historical events and people.
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- Patrick Murphy-Racey
- 01-28-19
great book if you can stand the reader
It is a haunting tale well told, of a time before child labor laws, before we harnased the atom, and before workers had rights in American industry. Sadly, the machine gun voice with it's extreme thespian highs, lows, and tremalo almost ruined it for me. The story kept me interested though and for that I am grateful.
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- Ex-Silicon Valley Girl
- 07-15-18
Interesting piece of unknown history
This book about a group of healthy, vivacious and nice small town women who painted the luminous marks on aviation and watch dials, while all the time being exposed to radioactive radium. This story is about their lives their jobs and the resulting friendships and romances.
Over time, though, many of these women became ill, dying a painful, disfiguring and slow death. Doctors couldn’t help them because they’d never seen these types of health issues.
Their employer covers up the dangers of handling the radium, telling the women it’s healthy and safe. Fighting lawsuits for years.
The story is well told and brings the women’s stories to life.
Worth a credit!
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