On the face of it the author takes us on a guided tour of the different types of cloud, one chapter for each. But this is no school textbook; there's poetry, philosophy, art appreciation, ornithology, flights of fancy, daydreams, odd anecdotes, even odder anecdotes....
He asks the question "Why does rain fall from up above?" and remembers that Frankie Lymon asked the same question in the song "Why Do Fools Fall In Love". He then conducts an imaginary explanation to Mr Lymon, as I'm sure nobody did at the time, and concludes that Frankie's decline into drug addiction and an early death might have been avoided if someone had only taken the time and trouble to explain some simple meteorology to the poor boy. It all makes perfect sense I assure you!
Even if you don't remember the science the book leaves you looking at clouds differently and appreciating their beauty.
The picture above is a "fallstreak hole" and is apparently not that rare though they are usually circular rather than looking as though a submarine has just fallen through the clouds.
Altocumulus stratiformis perlucidus, I think!
"Sundogs" caused by sunlight passing through ice-crystals in the upper atmosphere.
Good old cumulo-nimbus starting to build up.
After an evening storm.
Take care.
I confess I hadn't noticed your book list! I've read Notes from Walnut Tree Farm and The Wild Places and must look for some of the others. The cloud book sounds interesting, I like looking at clouds but don't know much about them. I love the last of your photos, it's really beautiful.
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