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Freaks of the Storm: From Flying Cows to Stealing Thunder: The World's Strangest True Weather Stories

Tekijä: Randall S. Cerveny

JäseniäKirja-arvostelujaSuosituimmuussijaKeskimääräinen arvioKeskustelut
755355,214 (3.44)-
In the course of his numerous talks and presentations to college and grade school students, civic clubs, and nursing homes, climatologist Randy Cerveny found that people of all ages are fascinated by the "unusual"--and he seized on that fascination to tell them about strange weather. Now, in his first book, the rest of us can learn of real, documented stories such as these: Odd occurrences of chickens losing all their feathers during tornadoes (so-called "chicken plucking"); Strange stories of finding lightning victims who have been completely stripped of all of their clothes (through a process known as "the vapor effect"); Weird stories of how past powerful hailstorms have both led to the ending of one war--and the complete prevention of another; Bizarre uses of weather--such as the strange contraption called a "windwagon" that literally "sailed" nearly 500 miles from Kansas to Colorado; Each chapter in Freaks of the Storm encompasses the oddities of a specific type of weather, such as tornadoes, hurricanes, lightning, and hail. The author also divides specific conditions into a set of categories associated with the overall phenomena.… (lisätietoja)
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näyttää 5/5
Its an interesting book - not as scientific as I would like it, more a listing of anecdotes about weather related stuff. The author is a bit dry, but knows his stuff. Some of the stories are quite remarkable - others, are based on heresy only.

Recommended, but there are probably better books like this out there. ( )
  TheDivineOomba | Jun 14, 2015 |
The information regarding flying cows, man-killing hail, the feats of tornadoes, etc., is very interesting. But what this book needed (and, alas, didn't get) was an editor who knew what s/he was doing. Specifically, a text editor who knew what s/he was doing. More than once, I followed a long, twisting, rambling sentence to its conclusion only to go back and start again before I realized that the sentence lacked a verb. Simple rules of grammar, such as subject/verb agreement, are often ignored. Good editing would have caught most of this and cleaned it up. As it stands, interesting for the content, but a struggle to get through without being sidetracked into the "count the errors!" game. ( )
  emmelisa | Jan 22, 2008 |
Cerveny has organized his book into sections of types of weather oddities, e.g. hurricanes, hail, tornados, with additional sections at the end for extremes, and one odd weather story for every state in the United States, plus the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico. There are numerous small photographs and other illustrations throughout. The book doesn't have narrative flow, but most parts are pretty gripping. Fascinating though it is to read that some people have survived being picked up by a tornado and spun around in the center, I don't think I'll try it.

The sections on specific types of weather usually have thirteen parts, "lucky" thirteen being safety measures. One can hope that people who think that strength of character is sufficient protection from extreme weather will learn a little sense. Made me try to remember where my portable radio is!

Obviously, weather buffs will eat this up. It is also a great book for anyone who like collections of oddities from such "fortean" authors as Charles Berlitz - the advantage is, these are much more likely to be true. Cerveny includes some legends, biblical stories and credible reports, although he is careful to specify when something is considered to be official. He notes that although "ball" lightening has not been scientifically observed, most experts agree that the large number of sightings indicate that it must exist.

It is also an interesting book for picking up and thumbing through at odd moments. I think I was most struck by the case of a PINE plank that was driven through an IRON girder by a tornado. How is that even possible?!

I was torn between giving this a 4 or a 5. Cerveny could do with reading a little more broadly - 1757 was not the Middle Ages in Germany (p.85). Citations are often giving a rather general terms without precise dates or pagination.

There is an extensive bibliography as well as a detailed index. ( )
  PuddinTame | Oct 6, 2007 |
fascinating topic, but the writing style is surprisingly unengaging. A case of too much information, poorly organized. ( )
  amydross | Jul 10, 2006 |
I got this book for the tornado stories, of course. Lots of weird stories, most of which are substantiated in some way. The unsubstantiated ones are still fun to read, too.
  enchiladaplate | May 3, 2006 |
näyttää 5/5
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Englanninkielinen Wikipedia (3)

In the course of his numerous talks and presentations to college and grade school students, civic clubs, and nursing homes, climatologist Randy Cerveny found that people of all ages are fascinated by the "unusual"--and he seized on that fascination to tell them about strange weather. Now, in his first book, the rest of us can learn of real, documented stories such as these: Odd occurrences of chickens losing all their feathers during tornadoes (so-called "chicken plucking"); Strange stories of finding lightning victims who have been completely stripped of all of their clothes (through a process known as "the vapor effect"); Weird stories of how past powerful hailstorms have both led to the ending of one war--and the complete prevention of another; Bizarre uses of weather--such as the strange contraption called a "windwagon" that literally "sailed" nearly 500 miles from Kansas to Colorado; Each chapter in Freaks of the Storm encompasses the oddities of a specific type of weather, such as tornadoes, hurricanes, lightning, and hail. The author also divides specific conditions into a set of categories associated with the overall phenomena.

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