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The Cloud Book

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This attractive and entertaining guide to the clouds, helps readers to identify every cloud type and related phenomena, and understand its implications for the weather. Unlike other books about clouds and weather, which can be very scientific and hard to understand, The Cloud Book follows a logical progression from low clouds to the high stratus clouds, and on to special clouds. The book also features a detailed introduction on the history of cloud classification--how it came about, the challenge involved with naming transitional forms in nature and how it was overcome. Packed with stunning images from the Met Office's archive combined with a lively and informative text, this is the definitive guide to the clouds and the skies.

160 pages, Paperback

First published March 21, 2008

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About the author

Richard Hamblyn

27 books14 followers
Richard Hamblyn studied at the universities of Essex and Cambridge, where he wrote a doctoral dissertation on 18th-century topographical writing. His first book, The Invention of Clouds (2001) told the story of Luke Howard, the amateur meteorologist who named the clouds in 1802; his other publications include The Cloud Book (2008) and Extraordinary Clouds (2009), both published in association with the (UK) Met Office; Data Soliloquies (2009), co-written with the digital artist Martin John Callanan; and Terra: Tales of the Earth, a collection of stories about major natural disasters. His anthology, The Art of Science: A Natural History of Ideas, was published by Picador in October 2011. It is a wide-ranging collection of readable science writing from the Babylonians to the Higgs boson.

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5 stars
35 (30%)
4 stars
49 (42%)
3 stars
28 (24%)
2 stars
3 (2%)
1 star
0 (0%)
Displaying 1 - 15 of 15 reviews
Profile Image for Robert.
827 reviews44 followers
July 14, 2020
This isn't a coffee-table book of the prettiest/most dramatic cloud pictures available. Instead it is a book that explains the classifications of clouds used by the global meteorological community, with the photographs acting primarily as illustrations. As such they are very good - and some of them actually are pretty or dramatic. The explanations, with the aid of the glossary are probably accessible to most people, definitely so if the reader has prior familiarity with basic amateur meteorology, including terms like troposphere, cold front, depression, convection, etc. And indeed the text will give people who need to be able to make short-term weather forecasts based only on information directly observable by their senses (e.g. hikers/mountaineers) much useful knowledge. At the end there is a section on rare cloud types and optical atmospheric phenomena that can and does indulge the urge towards the dramatic more than the main body of the book and a brief essay on clouds in relation to anthopogenic climate change, a topic of great complexity and importance that is also difficult to study.

Given its aims, this is a very good book.
Profile Image for An Te.
386 reviews26 followers
November 9, 2019
Great content. And a supremely dynamic and interesting topic. The format of the book could have been better. Words on one side and pictures on the other. It all became a little confused at times. Although, I think that is in the most part attributable to my lack of 'picture' book reading and exposure to clouds in general, other than cirrus, cumulonimbus clouds.

Richard make its an appealing and exciting science. Lots of information for a novitiate or a cloudspotter to engage with on a daily basis! And I like the little extra information on cloud formation and climate change. Really interesting last section that embraces uncertainties we all have in scientific endeavours.
2,453 reviews6 followers
September 21, 2020
Nice photos. Not a book to read from start to end though. Most of the writing just describes the different types of clouds.
Profile Image for Jamie.
1,003 reviews12 followers
July 24, 2024
Interesting guide, but the pictures can definitely do with an HD update.
552 reviews9 followers
May 22, 2024
Cloud 9 and counting

This is a wonderful book - factual for those wanting to learn more about cloud classification but also fascinating with lore and historical anecdotes (cloud 9 was the highest one time). It also contains information on climate change which makes one pause. This is a book you will dip into for years to come - excellent picture illustrations - I would have loved more of each type of classification. I would also love a book that i could put my photos into and find out the names of them. I am getting better after reading this though.
160 reviews2 followers
January 17, 2024
Who would have thought that clouds could be divided into twenty-seven classifications. In The Cloud Book: How to Understand the Skies Richard Hamblyn briefly recounts the history of cloud physics and identification then describes the three major types of clouds each divided into nine cloud states. Each cloud state possesses an identifying abbreviation and unique international symbol. Photographs for each cloud state punctuate the text so readers can see exactly what Hamblyn is talking about. He also provides information about what meteorological significance each cloud state might have for helping in the prediction of the weather. This little volume opens up the world of cloud watching. Keep it handy for your own cloud gazing. Read and enjoy!
4 reviews2 followers
September 25, 2008
Lots of photos to help anyone identify all many types of clouds. Descriptions convey how constantly active clouds are as they morph from one variety into another. Includes short discussions of the aurora and rare cloud types.
15 reviews
July 16, 2013
I'm a blue sky thinker so gazing up is normal for me - this book helped me make sense of what I see. I'm now a certified cloud bore. Long car journeys don't have to be tedious thanks to this book - you can analyse the skyscape in front of you and anticipate what's coming on the horizon.
Profile Image for Kenny.
43 reviews2 followers
August 10, 2013
Good book if you for cloud-spotting, less good if you're interested in the science behind clouds.
Profile Image for Paul.
5 reviews
July 20, 2016
OK as a high level cloud classification guide.
Don't expect to gain understanding on underlying physics and evolution between classes.
Profile Image for KP.
245 reviews
December 31, 2017
I think the author has an incredible understanding of the cloud classification presented, but i came out feeling more befuddled than when I started! I had just read Gavin P-P's book, with a world wide pool of photos to choose from.
The best part of this book was the examples of accessory features and rare cloud formations and optical illusions.
Displaying 1 - 15 of 15 reviews