
The illustrations in this portrait are fresh and spare, highlighting the concepts behind Zaha's designs. Her architects continued "making models of her visions" even after her death, which is gently portrayed in this book for young readers.

Eventually, her designs are built all over the world. Working past the initial rejection and discrimination she faces, Zaha grows her firm from one room to an entire building. She then sets to work planning and designing what the world has never seen: buildings conceived after the shapes and patterns of nature.

"Zaha has ideas." Zaha studies math, then leaves home to study architecture in London. She designs her own clothes, wonders at the ruins in her homeland, and dreams of designing cities. Zaha Hadid, a native of Baghdad, grows up admiring nature and patterns.

A visionary architect from Iraq gets well-deserved attention in Winter's new picture-book biography about a woman of courage whose ideas and persistence influenced the world.
