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Discusses such elements of weather as clouds, wet air, frost, ice, wind, and air pressure. Includes some projects.

61 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1992

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About the author

John Farndon

639 books31 followers
John Farndon is an internationally known author, as well as a playwright, composer and songwriter, whose work has been performed at such theatres as the Donmar and Almeida in London and the Salisbury Playhouse and selected for showcases, such as Beyond the Gate.

He has written hundreds of books, which have sold millions of copies around the world in most major languages and include many best-sellers, such as the award-winning Do Not Open, which received rave reviews in the USA and became a cult-hit as well as featuring on the New York Times and Washington Post best-seller lists. In earlier years, he wrote mostly for children, and has been shortlisted a record four times for the junior Science Book prize. Books such as How Science Works and How the Earth Works each sold over a million copies worldwide. But recently he has written much more for adults.

Many of his books focus on popular science, and in particular earth science, nature, and environmental issues. His Practical Encyclopedia of Rocks and Mineral is widely used as a reference work by geologists, while The Atlas of Oceans, his big book on endangered life in the oceans for Yale in the USA (A&C Black in the UK and Australian Geographic in Australia), garnered glowing reports prepublication from major figures such as the Cousteaus, Carl Safina, Nancy Knowlton and Harm de Blij.

But he has covered a wide range of topics, from contemporary China to the food market. The history of ideas and intellectual curiosity is a particular speciality.

In 2010, his book for Icon Do You Think You're Clever? was a best-seller, reaching the top 20 on Amazon and the top 10 in South Africa and Turkey, and was shortlisted for the Society of Authors Education Award. The follow-up The World’s Greatest Idea was selected as one of the top 50 Wish List books of the year in South Africa.

He has been interviewed extensively on radio and TV stations around the world, and conducted talks, demonstrations and displays at many events, from the Brighton Science Festival to the Oxford Literary Festival.

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Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
Profile Image for Heather.
1,081 reviews77 followers
August 31, 2008
I really liked this book for one reason - the pictures of the clouds were amazing. We used it specifically for cloud identification and explanation of how they are formed.

The rest of the book may or may not be good, I don't really know. I browsed through it and didn't feel the need to use it except for the part mentioned above.

I'd recommend checking it out from the library before you invest though.
Profile Image for Brittany.
1,195 reviews28 followers
July 23, 2013
Covering most major topics, clouds, forecasting, storms, etc. this is a wonderful book for children interested in learning more about the weather.
Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews