This book is definitely written for a certain type of person, and I am very much that type. I already have a reputation among those who know me for being able to talk endlessly about the weather, and this book has equipped me with so much more information than I know what to do with. I have been trying out the things I've learned since the moment I picked the book up, and I'm ecstatic to report that it has already saved me from postponing a walk to the shop, and from getting a complete soaking. (In the first instance I was able to tell that despite how overcast the sky was, the rain was almost certainly going to hold off, and in the second instance I advised that a shower we were caught in would be short-lived and we should wait it out under a shop canopy rather than make a run for it. I now suspect my friends may believe me capable of psychic premonition, though whether or not they agree with my opinion that the truth is much, much cooler remains to be seen.)
I have always loved paying attention to the small details, and certainly you don't need an intricate knowledge to appreciate such things. I will say that understanding makes it all the better, though. This book was absolutely full of the things I was hoping for, and only enhances my love of the natural world -- there is so much happening, all the time, and it's exciting and humbling to catch a glimpse of it, a moment of recognition in the language being spoken. There is so much information packed into this book that I cannot possibly remember it all, but I know that I'm going to be using it time and time again as a reference, until I have memorised absolutely everything in it. It really does change the way you look at the world -- I always enjoyed taking a moment to check out the sky each morning, but now I find myself aware of so many other things I had been completely ignorant of before. A book that allows you to see with new eyes is an incredible gift.
I think a lot of people would look at this book and think it couldn't possibly be for them, but I would recommend giving it a shot regardless. A lot of people, regrettably, view weather as a boring subject, or at least an everyday one, but I think it's an example of how things can become dull through familiarity. The weather is always there, doing its thing, and most people in the UK will joke that this thing is probably raining. It seems predictable, even if only for its unpredictability, and nobody thinks much deeper than that. This book could very well change that view. Once you're aware of what's going on, the intricate magic of it all, it's impossible to look at any kind of weather without awe. Gooley is very tongue-in-cheek about weather nerds, and it's amusing to see it acknowledged that we probably only have a limited welcome in casual dinner conversation (I know my friends have to be very cautious about timing if they ask me a weather question, or make a comment about something they have observed), but at the same time this book has done nothing but re-enforce how much I love the weather and how I'm quite happy to be potentially ejected from the dinner conversation. I'll go sit out in the garden -- I have lots more to look out for now.