This is the story of our greatest obsession- a gripping account of the sailors, scientists and inventors who sought to understand the weather
The Sunday Times bestseller. An astonishing account of the sailors, scientists and inventors who sought to understand the weather.
**Book of the Week on Radio 4**
'Gripping' The Times
'Exhilarating' Sunday Times
In an age when a storm was evidence of God's wrath, pioneering meteorologists had to fight against convention and religious dogma to realise their ambitions. But buoyed by the achievements of the Enlightenment, a generation of mavericks set out to unlock the secrets of the atmosphere.
Meet Luke Howard, the first to classify the clouds, Francis Beaufort, quantifier of the winds, James Glaisher, explorer of the upper atmosphere by way of a hot air balloon, Samuel Morse, whose electric telegraph gave scientists the means by which to transmit weather warnings, and at the centre of it all Admiral Robert FitzRoy- master sailor, scientific pioneer and founder of the Met Office.
Peter Moore's exhilarating account navigates treacherous seas, rough winds and uncovers the obsession that drove these men to great invention and greater understanding.
This is the story of our greatest obsession- a gripping account of the sailors, scientists and inventors who sought to understand the weather
The Sunday Times bestseller. An astonishing account of the sailors, scientists and inventors who sought to understand the weather.
**Book of the Week on Radio 4**
'Gripping' The Times
'Exhilarating' Sunday Times
In an age when a storm was evidence of God's wrath, pioneering meteorologists had to fight against convention and religious dogma to realise their ambitions. But buoyed by the achievements of the Enlightenment, a generation of mavericks set out to unlock the secrets of the atmosphere.
Meet Luke Howard, the first to classify the clouds, Francis Beaufort, quantifier of the winds, James Glaisher, explorer of the upper atmosphere by way of a hot air balloon, Samuel Morse, whose electric telegraph gave scientists the means by which to transmit weather warnings, and at the centre of it all Admiral Robert FitzRoy- master sailor, scientific pioneer and founder of the Met Office.
Peter Moore's exhilarating account navigates treacherous seas, rough winds and uncovers the obsession that drove these men to great invention and greater understanding.
This is the story of our greatest obsession- a gripping account of the sailors, scientists and inventors who sought to understand the weather
Peter Moore is a writer, journalist and lecturer. He teaches creative writing at the University of Oxford. His debut, Damn His Blood, reconstructed a rural murder in 1806. His second, The Weather Experiment, a New York Times 'Notable Book of the Year', traced early efforts to forecast the weather. His latest book, Endeavour, was a multiple book of the year and a Sunday Times bestseller. He presents a history podcast called Travels Through Time.
Richly researched, exciting... It is both scientific and cultural
history, of prizewinning potential and as fresh and exhilarating
throughout as a strong sea breeze.
*Sunday Times*
Superbly researched and grippingly written... Moore is at least as
interested in the personalities and their rivalries, and the sheer
spendour and catastrophies of weather itself - storms and
shipwrecks, heatwaves and floods (all vividly described) - as by
the science. And he weaves it together, deftly picking up threads
left dangling in earlier chapters, darting across continents,
embracing swashbuckling sea captains and fastidious bureaucrats,
penny-pinching politians and mad inventors, with as sharp an eye
for eccentricity, absurdity and tragedy as for genius. The result
is a panorama of the entire Victorian era.
*The Times*
The Weather Experiment is a genuinely gripping read and
demonstrates how scientific ideas can come ahead of the time
*Mail on Sunday*
Moore is the rare science writer who can describe dew point so
poetically you feel you’re with him in a twinkling field of white
clover on a cool summer morning… Evocative and full of wisdom for
modern times.
*New York Times Book Review*
The Weather Experiment is not the first book to have been written
about FitzRoy…but Moore’s achievement is to imbue him and his work
with palpable narrative life, while surrounding him with a large
supporting cast of contemporaries
*The Times Literary Supplement*
A skilful, detailed account of a complex story, in which scientific
advances are far from inevitable in a world of flawed humans and
bad luck... Moore's engaging, often surprising work of
storytelling, written with such care and pleasure, is a fine
tribute
*Spectator*
Impressive
*Guardian Weekly*
Thought-provoking… Rich and informative … Arnold Toynbee once
railed against the view that ‘History is just one damned thing
after another’. Recording weather data day in, day out must feel
like one damn temperature reading after another. Yet Moore has
skilfully converted decades of routine monotony into a gripping
tale of derring-do.
*Literary Review, Book of the Month*
Elegantly constructed … The Weather Experiment surprises
constantly, often by weaving together the famous and the
obscure
*Wall St Journal*
Prepare for turbulence in this history of Britain’s seminal
contribution to weather forecasting
*Nature*
This biography is an impressive achievement
*BBC Focus*
Moore’s enthusiasm for his subject and the astonishing audacity of
those long ago storm chasers make the book a deeply enjoyable
read.
*Daily Beast*
Moore writes about this band of ad hoc scientists with brio, and
it’s hard not to be awed and charmed by their united quest to prove
that earth’s atmosphere was not chaotic beyond comprehension, that
it could be studied, understood and, ultimately, predicted …
Detailed and insightful, this book is as relevant as ever in this
era of rapid climate change.
*Kirkus Reviews*
Rich and enlightening, I’ll never look at a dewy morning in the
same way again.
*Sarah Bakewell*
For illuminating a byway of scientific history that many scarcely
knew existed we must thank Peter Moore, whose superbly researched
an grippingly written book is more than a dusty account of early
meteorologists
*The Times*
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