Review by Choice Review
Pretor-Pinney offers this good supplement to any cloud atlas, containing colored pictures of all cloud types. He "reveals everything there is to know about clouds," with details; many subtopics make the book delightful. There is a great account of a pilot who had to eject and with his parachute went down through a thunderstorm, and an enlightening explanation of the origin of the expression "to be on cloud nine." There is also a story of the smoke-off between a man and the devil. The final story is of Pretor-Pinney's journey to Northern Australia to view the Morning Glory, a roll cloud of extraordinary dimensions providing glider pilots with great rides. Included are many optical phenomena: haloes, coronas, sun dogs, and discussions of fog, clouds in contact with Earth's surface. Charge separation to produce lightning is explained; lightning includes both in-cloud and cloud-to-ground varieties as well as sheet lightning and ball lightning. Winter's seasonal affective disorder, the "feeling down" syndrome due to lack of sunlight, is important at higher latitudes and particularly affects older women. In Japan and China, a summer equivalent is due to relentless blue skies. Some concepts in physics are included. ^BSumming Up: Recommended. General readers; lower-division undergraduates; two-year technical program students. A. E. Staver emeritus, Northern Illinois University
Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
With tongue firmly in cheek and more than a little irony, Pretor-Pinney, founder of the Cloud Appreciation Society, clears up any confusion readers may have about what separates a stratus from a cirrus from a cumulonimbus. He starts at the bottom-that is, at sea level-and discusses the types of clouds that form at each level in the atmosphere. The result is an amusing and remarkably informative jaunt through the heavenly vapors that draws on classical poetry, physics, geekery and pop culture. Despite this improbable melange, Pretor-Pinney succeeds in fleshing out subtleties and making difficult concepts like convection, advection, condensation and atmospheric optics comprehensible to almost any reader. The author has included dozens of illustrations, cloud photos (including one that looks like two cats dancing and another that resembles Thor hurling a lightning bolt) and diagrams showing the anatomy and lifecycles of clouds. Rounding out the volume are a chapter on the human effects on clouds and a narrative about the author's pursuit of the "Morning Glory," which he calls "the most spectacular cloud in the world." By mixing self-deprecating humor and hard science, Pretor-Pinney makes learning about clouds fun. (June) Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.
Review by Kirkus Book Review
A handbook with pizzazz from the Oxford-educated founder of the Cloud Appreciation Society. British journalist Pretor-Pinney brings enthusiasm and knowledge to the subject of clouds. All the basics of a field guide are here, with chapters on each of the ten fundamental types of clouds--the low-lying cumulus, cumulonimbus, stratus and stratocumulus; the mid-level altocumulus, altostratus and nimbostratus; and the high cirrus, cirrocumulus and cirrostratus--plus contrails and assorted others not recognized as true types. The author's "How-to-Spot" page on each cloud describes its characteristics, and tells how to distinguish among its subtypes and variations. The author spells out clearly, with words and diagrams, just how clouds form and the weather associated with each kind. Such facts, however, are but a small part of his armamentarium. He treats the reader to mini-essays on clouds in Christian iconography, in English literature, in Greek drama and mythology and in the Hindu religion; on their impact on historic battles; on the development of the cloud harp, a musical instrument that creates music from the shape of clouds above it; on the Chinese chemist who makes short-term earthquake predictions based on the appearance of certain types of clouds. There's even a dramatic story about a U.S. Air Force pilot who was forced to eject from his jet at 47,000 feet and was tossed around in the violent, icy heart of a cumulonimbus, or giant thunder cloud, for 40 minutes before his parachute landed him safely on earth. In the final chapter, Pretor-Pinney's obsession with clouds leads him to travel from England to Australia for the chance to see a Morning Glory, a tremendously long cloud formation that cloudspotters consider the most spectacular in the world. Unfortunately, the tiny photos the author provides are inadequate to demonstrate this. Indeed, the book's usefulness as a guide would have been greatly enhanced if the numerous black-and-white photos where supplemented with color. Lively, literate and great fun to read. Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.