Judy Resnik and Christa McAuliffe before the fated Challenger flight (NASA photo scanned by J.L. Pickering)

IN 1978, THE glass ceiling at NASA shattered when Sally Ride, Judy Resnik, Anna Fisher, Kathy Sullivan, Shannon Lucid and Rhea Seddon were selected to undergo training to become America’s first women astronauts. The professional and personal history of each of these pioneering women and the gender discrimination they faced and ultimately transcended is the subject of Loren Grush’s fascinating new book The Six: The Untold Story of America’s First Women Astronauts.

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Art + Entertainment

Ricardo Nuila (photo by Jonas Mohr)

ONE MORNING IN March 2020, Stephen Hart, general manager for several profitable locations of a homegrown Houston burger chain, woke up with a fever and a growing lymph node below his left jaw. Like nearly half of all Americans, Hart received health insurance through his employer; but after a CAT scan in an emergency room revealed cancer in his tonsils, and a trip by ambulance to another branch where he waited for several hours for an ENT to confirm the diagnosis, Hart was told bluntly his insurance would not cover the medical care he needed.

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People + Places

LAST FALL, HOUSTON writer, poet, playwright, and performer Deborah D.E.E.P. Mouton enjoyed great success at Stages with her play Plumshuga, a celebration of the life story of legendary ballet dancer Lauren Anderson. In her brand-new, debut memoir Black Chameleon: Memory, Womanhood, and Myth, Mouton shares her own story in prose that reimagines the possibilities of what an autobiography can be. Publishers Weekly calls Black Chameleon “a spirited portrait of Black American womanhood,” and it is certainly another fine example of the high level of literary innovation and excellence to be found in Houston.

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