Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Warnings: The True Story of How Science Tamed the Weather

Rate this book
Experience the most devastating storms of the last fifty years through the eyes of the scientific visionaries who took them on and tamed them. For decades, the author, a pioneering meteorologist, has dedicated himself to saving lives by combining science, experience, and instinct. The struggle to understand nature's fury provides fascinating insights into the natural forces that shape our world, and the turbulent politics that influence our scientific establishment. Tracing the Herculean effort to improve weather forecasting and advanced warning systems, the author draws fascinating biographical sketches of the scientists behind the breakthroughs, such as Dr. Theodore Fujita, creator of the Fujita Scale for tornado measurement. With its gripping story-telling approach to major natural disasters, Warnings is narrative nonfiction at its heart-pounding best. ''I highly recommend this exceptional book.''
-- Roger Pielke, Sr. , Pielke Climate Science blog ''The weatherman's version of The Right Stuff --Mike Smith's Warnings . I recommend it highly.''
-- Tom Fuller , The Examiner ''A fascinating journey inside the world of weather and the mind and heart of the meteorologist. A great read for anyone.''
-- Bob Ryan , chief meteorologist, WRC TV (NBC), Washington DC, former president, American Meteorological Society ''This book chronicles the remarkable advances that have occurred in meteorology over the past 50 years--not through dry statistics but through very personal stories. The book discusses the virtual elimination of airline crashes due to wind shear and the thousands of lives saved by hurricane warnings. Its primary focus is on severe storms in the Midwestern U.S., but the issues raised about the evolution of forecasting the weather, and the impact those forecasts have on the people and commerce, are much more universal. The narrative throughout the book is engaging and compelling, and I found it very hard to put down after reading just the first few pages.This book is not just for hard-core weather enthusiasts or those who work in weather-related fields (though they will love it). Anyone who has ever watched a stormy sky on warm afternoon or felt moved by the images on the news following the Greensburg tornado or Hurricane Katrina (both of which are covered in this book) will get pulled into the narrative of this book.''
-- Keith Seitter , Executive Director, American Meteorological Society Boston

286 pages, Hardcover

First published May 1, 2010

18 people are currently reading
237 people want to read

About the author

Mike Smith

520 books55 followers
Librarian Note: There is more than one author in the Goodreads database with this name.

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
99 (42%)
4 stars
85 (36%)
3 stars
43 (18%)
2 stars
7 (2%)
1 star
1 (<1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 37 reviews
Profile Image for Chanele.
453 reviews8 followers
May 11, 2020
I picked this book up a decade ago when I was working on a journal piece dealing with storm shelter access in tornado-vulnerable regions of the country. While I used it for my research, I never sat down and just read it from cover to cover with no need. May 3, a date personal to me and my history with weather, came around, and I picked the book up to read in its entirety and in the order presented. All in all, I enjoyed the ride. While there are some moments in the middle where the science on data gets a little dry, but the emotions and storytelling connected to the major weather events selected by the author more than make up for those dips.

Some of the criticisms of the book seem to ignore the intended audience for the book - a non-academic reader with an interest in meteorology. This is not designed to be an academic text for use on a college campus, and those individuals will already have the high-level knowledge of how radar works and how it has developed. Keeping in mind his audience, while this book could have been much longer, and more issues discussed could have been told with greater detail, Smith strikes a good balance of providing the necessary facts while holding the reader's attention. The sprinkling of human touches throughout the science makes the book intelligent and a bit emotional (but full disclosure: I am emotional at all tornado stories!).

Smith has a huge arsenal of weather events to describe, and he chooses carefully. Some tornadoes are those that affected him personally, but some events, particularly the hurricanes, are life-changing events in the history of storm prediction. In particular, his account of the numerous failings around Hurricane Katrina, committed by everyone except the meteorologists, is well done. Obviously, he cannot get into the many layers of problems before, during, and after Katrina, but his job is not to address all of those. He simply has a few chapters to discuss the science and remind the reader that the best science in the world can't overcome horrible bureaucracy.

The book ends beautifully by demonstrating how far we've come with forecasting and the ability to save lives, the foundation of all forecasting work. Smith chooses the ferocious, although relatively not well-known (outside meteorology communities), Greensburg tornado to show how the advances in science have saved many lives. While the 1999 Bridge Creek-Moore tornado was perhaps even more of a celebration when comparing population to death toll, Smith makes good use of the facts around Greensburg to perfectly compare it to the earlier, much deadlier, yet otherwise very similar Udall tornado.

Smith has a lot to say in this area, and he says it well. I'd love to have a chat with him about the gaps we have in shelter access now that we've come so far in warnings, especially post-Joplin and the 2013 Moore tragedy.

Profile Image for Dr. Carl Ludwig Dorsch.
105 reviews48 followers
July 19, 2010



A description of the development of American severe weather warning systems focusing on tornados, but covering also the reception and integration of Fujita's downburst theories and including what reads as a fairly lengthy but not particularly informative aside on hurricane forecasting, relating specifically (and almost exclusively) to 1992's hurricane Andrew and the Katrina catastrophe of 2005.

Smith's history seldom reaches farther back than 1948, but this is because the volume is also something of a professional memoir: the author as a storm spotter in 9th grade 1966 Kansas City, his career as a television meteorologist in Oklahoma City, St. Louis and Wichita, and eventually his founding of WeatherData Services, Inc. in 1981. (WeatherData Services is a provider of "weather-risk management consulting and state-of-the-art weather forecasting and services to utility, transportation, manufacturing, educational and governmental clients"* and is now a part of AccuWeather Inc., though Mr. Smith remains its CEO and regularly touts its services, record and software in this book.)

Though expecting a broader history, two aspects of Mr. Smith's account stay with me. First is simply the record of discovery. It is a welcome but disconcerting experience to be reminded what, still beyond our ken, shares the planet with us. There are for instance, Smith informs us, huge djinn here, terrible creatures a dozen miles tall and a league wide, who, roaring with winds fiercer than a typhoon, suddenly appear and disappear across the land, often at night, indiscriminately destroying all they meet, only to, with no real notice, fold themselves up again into the air and vanish. What exactly are they? Our wise ones still try to understand, but only slowly and with much caution, as a djinni, even when encountered, is difficult to approach without suffering enormous violence: being fatally propelled through the air, having limbs ripped from one's body etc. It is easy at times to read Smith’s reports as records of the exploration of an unknown world.

On the other hand, Mr. Smith’s incomplete and largely anecdotal description of the development of the severe weather warning systems in the U.S. (both private and public, though mostly of the public systems and, again, most coherently on tornadic weather) from the post WWII radars to the current dopplers, and of the institutional and technological challenges in constructing what wants to be a network of instantaneous observational and communications capability, is a very human tale. And though perhaps a report from a planet more familiar -- with its institutional and bureaucratic conflicts and inertias as well as its incremental technological advances and uneven deployments -- it is also a tale well worth being reminded of.

"Warnings" unfortunately has no index, a disservice even in a work so slight.

*from an American Meteorological Society description

92 reviews
April 10, 2023
A very fascinating look at the history of storm forecasting and warning in the United States. The book provides a good overview of several pivotal weather disasters in American history with a mind to the social and economic fallouts that spurred changes in protocols or advancements in the field of meteorology (as well as weather-adjacent industries such as aviation, insurance, and communications).

It's definitely shocking to see how often advancements in meteorological technology or thinking were delayed or simply not invested in, due to personal ego and not wanting to spend the money. Very often significant loss of life and/or property had to occur before there was a genuine push for change and advancement.

While extremely informative, I did take slight issue with the fact that the author seems to praise his own/his company's forecasting skills to a level nearing infallible. Combined with the fact that comments about his accurate predictions often went hand in hand with commentary about other forecasters'/organizations' failures, it generally left a bad taste in the mouth. As more recent events are covered, the author also takes issue with various government organizations with this same attitude, which makes it sometimes harder to see the validity of his argument past what feels like an "I was right and you were wrong" rhetoric.

At the end of the day, the book holds true to its purpose "to tell the story of how the science of weather has improved American life." Perhaps the author's criticisms of bureaucracy and government feel more acute as the book progresses because they stand in stark contrast to the progress made in the field of weather science. One can certainly understand the frustration at having developed enough understanding and technology in field to literally save lives only to have those efforts thwarted by communication breakdowns, bureaucratic obstacles, or general governmental failures.
Profile Image for Betty.
547 reviews60 followers
August 22, 2010
When I first requested this book for review, little did I know I would be reading it and beginning my review amidst forest fires, smoky air, and strong wind gusts! My interest in requesting the book is twofold: I recall Hurricane Frieda roaring through Vancouver, BC (my home) in 1962, extremely rare for that area; my Dad's cousin, TV weatherman in Portland, OR, first to recognize and forecast it, spent the night updating on air. Weather has always fascinated me, not only because "everybody talks about the weather"!

"Warnings" is very easy to read for the layman. I was shocked to learn how lacking some of the basic things we now take for granted were, such as no tornado warnings as recently as the 1950s, in some areas of the U.S. even more recently. Not a hint! How many lives must have been lost needlessly in past years? Mike Smith has done his research, has lived his research, and knows how to deliver it. The book is historical, accurate, and personal. I was hooked on the Introduction which primes the reader for the main event, or in this case events, to come in this book.

Smith gradually builds from its early beginnings the study and workings of tornadoes in terms anyone can understand. The subject is fascinating as he writes it. By two-thirds through his book I am amazed that the few trips I have taken by plane were successful strictly on the basis of weather! The growth of knowledge, and the way that growth comes about is exciting and tragic at the same time. When the investigations turn to storm-chasing, the reader learns just how important this scientific information-gathering becomes, not just another daredevil stunt among adventure seekers as we might see on TV.

I found the information on Dr. Fujita's methods and discoveries to be well explained and the ignorance of the official weather prognosticators in their cocooned refusal to accept his discoveries almost inevitable, yet unacceptable and disastrous. Even when changes were made, neither pilots nor airport control staff were made aware of impending tornadoes, or "microbursts" (explained in the book) until very recently, a ruling referred to by Mike Smith as "bureaucratic myopia". This is non-fiction, but gave me the shivers in the same way as a thriller fiction would, especially with a very close call that was averted not by a weather warning, but because of a power outage at the airport just prior to a landing, causing the pilot to abort the landing.

Did you ever wonder how the newspapers got their weathermaps so up-to-date? Did you ever wonder how Doppler Radar came into being and how it works? These are questions I'd asked myself through the years and they are covered in this impressive book. This is not a large book, nor do you have to be a meteorologist or savant to read it. Nor does it deal exclusively with tornadoes. It is all written in simple language. There are also a number of photos in the book. While this book deals mostly with the U.S., it is of global significance.

Not surprisingly, the most critical event in the book is Hurricane Katrina. Among other things we learn what could go wrong with the forecast's timely releases, what did go wrong and why, and how they tried to get the evacuation process going while there was still time. The survivors were literally 'hung out to dry' as buck-passing and meals in high end restaurants took precedent over people. How many more could have survived if it weren't for the bureaucratic mumbo-jumbo and selfishness? The night of August 31, 2005 should be etched in their memories forever as deaths of survivors began to pile up. If bureaucracy hadn't fumbled the ball, the meteorological scientists would have netted it.

This is a fascinating book, full of suspense, telling it like it is, and a great learning experience without realizing just how much of what you read will stay with you. I highly recommend this book, it opened my eyes to the difficulties people 'in the know' deal with not just occasionally, but on-going in their efforts to keep us all as safe as possible. We know that paramedics, firemen, rescue teams all do this as part of the job, but we rarely think of the background to catastrophe. Winds, flash flooding, and the deadliest for a city below sea level: a storm surge. All closely watched. One last tornado is included: Greensburg, a town that disappeared, but has risen again. As an added bonus, this book is interactive. There are symbols scattered throughout which direct readers to a website where they can find videos, related information, and more.
Profile Image for Book Shark.
783 reviews167 followers
June 24, 2011
Warnings: The True Story of How Science Tamed the Weather by Mike Smith

" Warnings: The True Story of How Science Tamed the Weather " is a fantastic book that captures the evolution of meteorology through the personal accounts of Mike Smith. Like the perfect storm in which converging elements collide, this book is part memoir, part science and all real. This wonderful 304 page-book is composed of the following twenty-three chapters: 1. The Ruskin Heights Tornado, 2. No One Ever Knew it Was Coming, 3. "Nice People, But Odd", 4. The Government Gets in Gear, 5.The "Town That Died In Its Sleep", 6. The Paul Revere of Grandview Junior High, 7. The End of the Beginning, 8. Storm Chasers, 9. Tragedy, 10. Fujita, 11. The Day TV Weather Grew Up, 12. St. Louis and the Holiday Weather Hotline, 13. The Microburst Mystery, 14. Delta 191: Why Weren't They Warned, 15. The Delta Trial, 16. Weatherdata, 17. America Gets Dopplerized, 18. Hurricane Andrew, 19. Katrina: Part One, 20. Katrina: Part Two - Inaction In Action, 21. Katrina: Part Three - Murder By Bureaucracy, 22. Greensburg: Capstone of the Modern Warning System, and 23. Where There's Life, There's Hope.

Positives:
1. Written like a great engaging novel, but it's all real!
2. Great science writing! Bravo!
3. An educational treat.
4. The history of meteorology in elegant, page-turning prose from a first person account.
5. Meteorological terms well defined and illustrated.
6. The evolution of the Weather Bureau culture, fascinating stuff.
7. Mr. Smith knows his science and does a better job of conveying it to the masses.
8. Supercell thunderstorms, truly enlightening.
9. Tornadoes, tornadoes, tornadoes.
10. Interesting facts throughout the book.
11. How weather radars work.
12. The most important storm chase ever and why it is so.
13. Weather detective extraordinaire, Ted Fujita.
14. Find out when the first tornado was broadcast live.
15. Downbursts and microbursts!
16. The crash of Delta 191 in detail and its impact.
17. Doppler radars and its interesting history.
18. So many splendid examples of the progression of meteorology. Excellent!
19. The impact of Mr. Smith's Weatherdata business...
20. The evolution of the creation of various weather agencies.
21. A fascinating look at hurricanes. A better understanding of wind forces.
22. Hurricane Katrina analyzed to complete satisfaction and what we hopefully learned from it.
23. The terrible tornado that struck Greensburg, Kansas.
24. The advantages of precise forecasting.
25. Great use of illustrations!
26. Enjoyable read from cover to cover!


Negatives:
1. No references to speak of.
2. Having to buy extra copies for friends and family.
3. Having to wait for Mr. Smith's next book!

In summary, Mr. Smith "blew" me away with this book. A unique scientific book that reads like a great mystery novel and educates like an encyclopedia. This book was a real treat to read. It starts off with Mr. Smith's prodigious knowledge in meteorology, his passion for his work and his innate ability to convey such experiences in an engaging manner. Bravo! I can't recommend this book enough!
Profile Image for Marcie.
267 reviews
August 18, 2011
I don't think I would have found this as interesting if I hadn't moved from the mountain west (with its relatively mild weather) to the midwest (with frequent severe storms and tornado warnings). It helps that my daughter is fascinated by tornadoes/weather and includes storm chaser/meteorologist on her what-I-want-to-be list. I was fascinated by how the weather warning system, which I have taken for granted (and will no longer), developed over the last 65 years. The warnings and watches that are common to our spring and summer forecasts now carry more meaning, and I will react differently to them. It also gave me a different perspective on what it means to be prepared, and inspired me to truly prepare for the possibilities.
That said, I recommend this book with two caveats:
-The author has a very strong opinion amd the sharing of it seems to be one reason he wrote the book. His criticism on government bureaucracy and failed leadership, while valid, grew old by the end of the book.
-The descriptions of some of the most destructive storms of the last half century, while illustrative, seem somewhat voyeuristic as they draw on our morbid fascination with death and destruction to keep us reading.
Profile Image for Ken Heard.
755 reviews13 followers
September 25, 2017
I was surprised to learn that the Weather Bureau (now the National Weather Service) refused to issue tornado warnings as late as the 1950s so as not to scare people unnecessarily. That seems ridiculous today with constant live reports from tv weathermen, upgraded polarization Dopplar radars, satellite imagery that can pinpoint a tornado's thought process and more.

But that was the case, and Mike Smith was on the forefront of changing that practice. His book is an excellent history of tornadoes and hurricanes and the mindset that accompanied them in those days. The book is almost three-fold. First, he describes with excellent clarity the actual storms. He also throws in science behind the storms, what causes them, et al. And he includes his personal memoirs on them.

Like most meteorologists, Smith got involved in weather forecasting because of a storm. He saw a devastating Kansas tornado that sparked his interest as a child and he writes of his career and that childhood wonder throughout the book.

I'm the weather reporter for the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette newspaper, so this book is particular interesting to me. But I think anyone who is interested in weather, storm watching, history of storms or nature would find this book an excellent and entertaining read.
Profile Image for Emily Domitrovic hamburg.
13 reviews
May 15, 2016
An enjoyable and fascinating book that details the evolution of meteorology and forecasting over the past 70 years. It truly gave me a new appreciation for the good work done behind the scenes and taken for granted in this field that has reduced the loss of life and property both on the ground and in the aviation world due to advances in technology and communication processes. Smith also showed how no amount of technology can compensate for the bureaucracy and incompetence of the government in some cases (e.g., Hurricane Katrina) and warned of another catastrophe if a serious hurricane hit heavily populated areas on the east or west coasts if lessons weren't learned from the star buffoons in New Orleans regarding communication, evacuation, and rescue procedures.
Profile Image for Beth Mason.
44 reviews2 followers
April 23, 2019
So good! Surprisingly, a page turner.

I expected this book to be interesting. But I didn’t expect it to be such a page turner. I couldn’t put it down. The writing is excellent. It has a good pace and kept me coming back for more. I love reading about weather, but I can’t say too many meteorology books have had me up in the middle of the night saying “just one more chapter!” This one did. The specific storm stories weave together the topics perfectly. I want to deliver a free copy to anyone who snarks about the weatherman never getting it right. They just don’t understand. This book shines a light on the everyday heroics of storm forecasters that go unnoticed and unappreciated. And it’s a fun read!
Profile Image for Diana.
Author 1 book38 followers
January 12, 2014
I love reading books about the weather, and there are several great books out there about grand-scale disasters that shape us. Warnings looks at these storms through the lens of a meteorologist dedicated to predicting storms. Mike Smith shows us how these major storms have shaped our understanding of the science of weather, as well as how our growing understanding of weather shaped our ability to warn citizens, plan for disaster, and ultimately save lives. It is also a history of the meteorologists who continued to study dangerous weather and a government that stymied them at almost every turn. It's a smart, fascinating, and highly accessible read.
167 reviews
December 19, 2021
Great Historical Recap

The author did a wonderful job in describing the advances of meteorological technologies and the hurdles that science had dealt with over bureaucratically politics. These advances were described through various storm events throughout the book. The book is easily readable and very informative. It is a keeper for my library. Great job.
Profile Image for Mike B.
99 reviews30 followers
July 16, 2021
A great read from cover to cover, brimming with Tornado knowledge and dispelling the myths born in Hollywood blockbusters (you know which one). Biggest disappointment and myth confirmation, is that the government forbid warning localities about severe weather (Tornados).. now every end of the world movie/novel where the population isn't told about an A/B/C extinction level event seems a little more real. As a Jackson County long-time resident, and having talked to Ruskin survivors I was enthralled even more so. Good Read
Profile Image for Alice.
1,849 reviews
June 29, 2017
I have a warning before you read Warnings: if you are not highly interested in severe weather--particularly tornadoes--this book is probably not for you! I will be teaching a unit we call Masters of Disaster next school year so I happen to be interested in all things drastic weather right now, so this was a fun start to my immersion in this topic.
Profile Image for pianogal.
3,236 reviews52 followers
May 12, 2017
This one was a good read. It got a little tiresome with the author tooting his own horn throughout the book. But other than that I thought it was a good balance of weather, science, and politics.
Profile Image for zo &#x1f4f7; ꩜.
4 reviews
June 19, 2025
its a bit more about the technological advances of predicting storms and warning people than weather science but it was entertaining nonetheless!!!
70 reviews1 follower
Read
July 9, 2013
As someone who appreciates the sciences and those who devote themselves to its practice, "Warnings" helped me to understand just how much I underappreciate the science of meteorology. The book opens with a visceral account of a deadly train derailment on Amtrak's Vermonter line in 2005 when the tracks are washed out due to a flash flood. While reading this passage, I thought to myself, wait a second, I used to regularly ride Amtrak's Vermonter line back in 2005. Why didn't I know about this accident? As Mr. Smith explains, the reason is because it never happened. The derailment was prevented by meteorologists forewarning Amtrak of the danger, the washout was found, the train was cancelled, and a catastrophe was averted. And nobody, even people like me who regularly rode the line, paid any attention to the people who were working to keep us safe.

In the early chapters of "Warnings", Mr. Smith relates in a very personal manner the plight of the meteorologist. The lines of a poem he quotes by an anonymous writer called "The Old Forecaster's Lament" aptly describe the issue:

"When I am right no one remembers
When I am wrong no one forgets."

When their services are most needed, when a weather crisis approaches and they must warn of it, as Mr. Smith explains it, the meteorologist faces a moral dilemma. If they forecast an extremely severe storm and are wrong, they lose credibility and the next time a storm comes along people don't heed their warnings. If they are right, property is destroyed, and oftentimes, people die. Mr. Smith reifies the dilemma with a tale of a tornado he missed early in his career as a meteorologist for a news station in the midwest while many of the techniques and technologies now used in tornado prediction were in their nascent stages.

His descriptions of the development of modern meteorology are usually told with vivid accounts of specific disasters that served as pivots that drove the science forward, including tornadoes, weather-related airline crashes, and hurricanes. His description of the work and methods of the pioneering meteorologist Ted Fujita (author of the famous Fujita scale for tornadoes) is particularly gripping.

In the early and middle sections of the book, Mr. Smith provides a sense that during the critical moments in the development of many of the critical pieces of meteorological science, he was there and an active participant, and his accounts of the events convey an urgency to the work that was going on at the time. In the last chapters of the book, including sections on Hurricanes Andrew and Katrina, at which point Mr. Smith had founded a company to gather and market weather data, the tone of the book changes. He seems most interested in patting himself, his friends, and people in his field on the back while grumbling about the faceless bureaucrats in the government who make their job more difficult. It's a shame these final chapters left a sour taste, but still, the book admirably conveys the workings of an admirable and vital profession I have until now taken for granted.
9 reviews1 follower
June 9, 2011
As a life-long resident Tornado Alley, I found this book gripping and fascinating. I read it last year before all our horrible tornadoes this spring, and I can only wonder what the death toll would have been without the warning system we have in place now. I was especially dumbfounded at how long it took for the tornado warning system to be developed--the first city wide alarm was in the late 1960's! The US Weather Service kept weather forecasters from giving tornado warnings because they thought more deaths would result from panic than would be saved. I especially like the discussion about the genius of Dr. Fujita who created the tornado rating system. He visited my hometown of Lubbock after our 1970 tornado as part of his study of the severity of tornadoes. He also proposed the theory of microbursts, sudden powerful downbursts of wind which occur rapidly in thunderstorms. Tragically, one of the first demonstrations of his theory was Delta Flight 191, inbound to Dallas on August 2, 1985. The plane was struck by a microburst and all on board were killed. I was living in Dallas at the time of the crash and remember this event very well. Since Fujita's system of gathering wind data at airports was implemented, no microburst-related crashes or deaths have occurred.

Smith also discusses hurricane warnings and specifically comments on Andrew and Katrina. I think that other books, such as Isaac's Storm, are better at describing how warnings have been ignored, but I had forgotten how the media missed Hurricane Andrew because it occurred so far south of the main hotels--they thought Miami had "dodged the bullet" when in fact the devastation was horrifying. The many errors concerning Katrina have been reported elsewhere; the material here is good, but not new.

There is some self-promotion in the book, but as far as I can tell, it's warranted. He should be allowed some leeway for his fascinating tales. One chilling story is that the Doppler Weather radar map system we all know didn't get fully installed across the country until 1999--and before that our weather data came from WWII vintage radars still dependent on vacuum tubes! He reports that these were manufactured in only one plant--in Russia!

I read it through twice in two days and recommended it to all my friends.
Profile Image for Elaine Nelson.
285 reviews46 followers
July 12, 2010
Primarily the story of how the tornado warning system came to be, including the author's participation as a TV weather guy and then founder of a private weather service. And when he sticks to that, it's good stuff.

Periodically, there's these sort of anti-government zingers that just hit me the wrong way, although I can see where they come from, given his experience. Also, the last quarter of the book (except for the last chapter) goes into great detail about hurricanes (specifically Andrew & Katrina), and a lot of that is about the political aspects. So...meh. Although that last chapter is a great wrap-up of the difference between the response to a recent tornado versus response to a tornado 50+ years ago.

And one tiny quibble: the blurb gives the impression that he's talking about all the different kinds of weather events in the US, when really it's almost all tornadoes, with a detour into hurricanes. Coming from an area where tornadoes are vanishingly rare, I was a bit disappointed.

I think this makes a good read in conjunction with other weather history books: Children's Blizzard, Isaac's Storm, Cliff Mass's book, etc.
Profile Image for Lorna.
415 reviews1 follower
August 9, 2011
Oh, I love a good weather book. The information was not new to me -- having read it Nancy Mathis' Storm Warning -- but it still stuns me to know that it was forbidden to warn of tornadoes pretty much until the 1960s. Especially with the hysteria some of the local news outlets whip up today! But I certainly appreciate the development of radar technology. When I was a kid, one of the tornadoes of the 1974 Super Outbreak passed within a few miles of our house. We had no clue. Going back and studying the history, it was the Monticello, IN, tornado -- an F4 with the longest track of any of the tornadoes of that day. It had been on the ground since 3:45 PM. They had just issued a *thunderstorm* warning at 6:20 PM as our power went out (for the next three days). How could they not have known? So I guess I will take a little hype as a trade-off for letting the public know that there is a possibility of danger.
Profile Image for Jon Christianson.
5 reviews3 followers
July 11, 2010
Mike Smith does an excellent job of walking the reader through the history (and progress) of the National Weather Service in Warnings: The True Story of How Science Tamed the Weather. Smith incorporates a number of first-hand severe weather accounts dating back to the mid-1950s, which allows the book to read more like a story than a series of weather reports. Based on Smith’s meteorological experience and accomplishments (sold his company AccuWeather in 2006), he does a fair amount of self-promotion throughout the book, which borders on obnoxious at times. All in all, Smith has assembled a very insightful “weather” book that makes an especially interesting read for anyone who is involved in a weather-related field.
Profile Image for Don.
5 reviews
April 22, 2015
I've looked forward to reading this for ages as I'm fascinated by severe weather and forecasting. The book was most interesting with its accounts of the Tinker Air Force base tornadoes and the gripping acount of the Greensburg EF5, but the author's prodigious ego inserted itself so often throughout the book that I just couldn't get beyond it. It seems extraordiarily biased towards for-profit weather forecasting and scornful of everyone else. The author appears to believe that he's the most eminent figure in the history of meteorology as evidenced by the subtitle of his website: "The Top Weather Expert in the US." Right. The tone is self-aggrandizing and bordering on obnoxious.
Profile Image for Deborah Johnson.
1 review4 followers
May 10, 2011
I thought this would be a good handbook to read because I had just moved to the midwest in the middle of tornado alley. It was so much better than I could have ever expected - it was exciting and took me right into the middle of some of the most extreme storms of recent years. I would say that everyone from New Orleans should be reading this book! The Katrina chapters were so emotional. It is not at all a science book it is a life saver and a must read for anyone who has ever experienced extreme weather in their lives.
Profile Image for Lori Britton-levack.
2 reviews
February 3, 2013
This is a very informational book on how meterology has changed over almost 60 years. The information provided on past storms, and how prediction of life and property loss storms has drastically changed, and the different hurtles that were and still are present in effective warnings systems in place. The burecratic side of weather warnings is amazing, as is the un-decisive nature of federal ownership of when or how to word a warning. If you love meterology, and knowledge of history, you will enjoy this book as much as I did.
Profile Image for Candy.
434 reviews17 followers
November 2, 2011
Talk about an amazing read. The book chronicles the history of our weather warning system, focusing mainly on tornadoes. From the days when the NWS couldn't even mention or think about issuing a tornado warning to our high tech warning systems that we have now, this book covers it all without being too geeky for the average reader. As someone who has been 3 tornadoes in person and living in the Midwest, I definitely came away with a greater appreciation for our warning system.
Profile Image for Hannah.
5 reviews
June 19, 2015
I LOVE books about weather. And if someone is looking for a fun yet informative story, this is a pretty decent one. I give it two stars however, because I strongly feel that if you go into the history (that isn't yours personally) there should be references on where you found the information. He states that he was good friends with Fujita (which is awesome!) but he could still cite his work as well as other historical information.
Profile Image for Fincalian.
57 reviews22 followers
January 12, 2012
I enjoyed learning about the history of weather warning systems in America. Some of the information presented was quite shocking, and overall, this was an excellent book. My only complaint is that you can tell the author is not a writer. I felt parts of the book were disorganized, and his writing became repetitive at times, but I'm still glad I took the time to read this book.
Profile Image for Shawn.
623 reviews32 followers
March 29, 2015
A history of weather forecasting which focuses on the advances of technology and politics that made it all possible. A wonderful modern tale of science history.
Update: 4-14- Currently having my high school Freshman earth-space science class reading it and the students are enjoying it almost as much as I did.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 37 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.