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"I'd rather look at Grandma's drawers than see a backing wind," say folks on the eastern seaboard of the United States. Someone who is following an unlikely dream is said to be "chasing the wind." And if we suspect a big change is coming, we say, "something is in the wind." We name the winds: sirocco, Santa Ana, williwaw, chinook, monsoon. DeBlieu traces the ways wind shapes our reality, the earth's land and water, plants and animals, exploring everything in dramatic, immediate, and lucid prose.
"It begins with a subtle stirring caused by sunlight falling on the vapors that swaddle the earth. It is fueled by extremes--the stifling warmth of the tropics, the bitter chill of the poles. Temperature changes set the system in motion: hot air drifts upward and, as it cools, slowly descends.... Gradually the vapors begin to swirl as if trapped in a simmering cauldron. Air molecules are caught by suction and sent flying.... As the world spins, it brushes them to one side but does not slow them. Tumbling together, the particles of air become a huge, unstoppable current."
And so the winds are born. Read Wind and you'll never again take an exhilarating kite-flying day for granted. --Therese Littleton
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Thorough research and engaging writing.,
By A Customer
This review is from: Wind : How the Flow of Air has Shaped Life, Myth, and the Land (Hardcover)
Although the writer is stimulated by the winds of the outer banks, her handling of the subject is quite universal, and appeals to those of us who live on the Great Lakes, which have severe and fascinating wind patterns. Ms DeBlieu is a deft writer and has done meticulous research. This book ranks with Longitude by Dava Sobel, McPhee and Ian Fleming.
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
marvelous mix of good science and personal essay,
By Rick Hunter (Malone, NY United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Wind : How the Flow of Air has Shaped Life, Myth, and the Land (Hardcover)
Jan DeBlieu's Wind: How the Flow of Air has Shaped Life, Myth, and the Land is a wonderful combination of scientific discussion and personal essay. Ms. DeBlieu approaches her subject from numerous angles, from the affects of wind on history to its role in energy production and her own moods. Living on North Carolina's Outer Banks, Ms. DeBlieu regularly returns to her own, coastal and windy environment, to provide a highly personal perspective on her subject. I learned a great deal from this lucid work, but must confess that what I enjoyed most was DeBlieu's personal observations and writerly voice. She is a fine companion to spend the afternoon with on the breezy hill in Northern New York where I live.mar
7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Great stuff,
By goldschmidt, peter (Kiel, Germany) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Wind (Paperback)
Think about it. If someone asked you to write a non-fiction (but also not totally scientific) book about the wind, how much could you write? A few paragraphs? A few pages? Jan DeBlieu has written nearly 300 pages not only about the wind, but also its effects. Her inspiration came from living on the Outer Banks of North Carolina and watching the wind blast this land, break the trees, scatter the wildlife and discourage the people. In the book, DeBlieu discusses many facets to the wind and its effects: mythology of the wind, the effect of the wind on history (due to prevailing winds, Europeans had sailed to Brazil long before they set foot in western Africa), as well as trees, birds, sand, ocean currents and man himself. Man's attempts to confront the wind (such as skyscrapers whose windows are blown out in strong winds) and to use the wind (such as windmills for energy) are also discussed. But the facts presented in this book are only half the story. This is not a scientific book written in dry language. If that were so, this book would not be particularly interesting to a casual reader. But, as the blurb on the back cover states, "Jan DeBlieu brings a poet's voice and a scientist's eye" to her study of the wind. And that is what makes the book so interesting. DeBlieu takes scientific descriptions and transforms them into sentences where you think "I wish I could write like that". For example: "Just as it has shaped the history of mankind, the seasonal paths of animals, and the spread of vegetation, wind chisels the crust of the earth. It whistles around mountains and through passes, eroding rock as it gains speed. Bit by bit it skims the tops off plowed fields. It scatters ash from volcanic explosions and so creates some of the richest soil on earth." If you enjoy learning about the world around you, but are put off by the scientific language, you will find this book to be - I can't avoid it - a breath of fresh air.
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