What’s in a cloud? What separates a tropical storm from a winter blizzard? And what exactly is El Nino? Elliot Rappaport, a captain of traditional sailing ships, has spent three decades at sea, where understanding weather is the difference between life and death.
Told through a series of tall ship voyages, Rappaport’s narrative takes readers from the icy seas of Greenland to the Roaring Forties, places where one can experience all four seasons in an hour. He navigates the turbulent waters of the Strait of Gibraltar, en route to storied port cities of the Mediterranean. In the vast tropical Pacific, he crosses the equator, where heat, moisture, and unsettled winds churn out powerful squalls, and drops anchor in isolated ports of call. He explores wide swathes of ocean to explain how the trade winds have carried ships westward for centuries, and how ancient Polynesian explorers pushed back the other way.
Written in stunning prose, brimming with wisdom, curiosity, and humour, Reading the Glass brilliantly blends science and memoir to reveal how weather has shaped our oceans, our history, and ourselves.
‘Brimming with knowledge and experience . . . delightful’
TRISTAN GOOLEY, DAILY TELEGRAPH
‘A fabulous compendium of terror and disaster, expertise and courage’
ADAM NICOLSON, author of The Seabird’s Cry
‘Evokes panoramas of sea and land with confident flair’
WALL STREET JOURNAL‘An extraordinary book by a modern-day Melville . . . I can’t recommend this book highly enough’
MARK VANHOENACKER, author of Skyfaring
‘A gripping account of what weather is, how it feels to be in the middle of it, and what we can expect going forward!’
BILL MCKIBBEN, author of The End of Nature
Reviews
There are no reviews yet.