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The Book of Clouds

By: John A. Day
Binding: Hardcover
Publisher: Silver Lining Books
ISBN: 0760735360
ISBN-13: 9780760735367
Released: 02 Aug 2003
RRP: £13.00
Average Rating:


Customer Reviews

lovely reference book - By: skittlepig, 18 May 2008
This book is a great for those who have a 'beginner' interest in clouds, as it is mostly pictorial. I bought it as a gift for my boyfriend & he has great fun trying to identify what types of cloud are in the sky.
Such a dreadful shame - By: J. M. Aucken, 26 Dec 2007
A beautiful book. I received a copy for Christmas (at my specific request!). I'm so sorry I can't give it the 5 stars it ought to have. Why? Because the quality of the photographic printing so often leaves a lot to be desired. I just don't believe that so many of the photos were, in their originals, as grainy as they have been reproduced. Even the paper feels rough! Pages 94/95 are just one example of many. I have loved clouds for decades & was reallly hoping for a set of photographs of coffee table standard. I am very disappointed. However, I would far rather have the book than not - & in spite of my criticism.
Wonderful - By: Fantasyreader, 27 Sep 2007
A marvellous book, pictures are wonderful, only minor niggle is that the author quotes figures in miles otherwise a wonderful book with the pictures taking pride of place, pity there isn't a DVD to show movement.
Superb! - By: Ibiduo Chris Berepiki, 25 Dec 2006

Any aviator would tell you about the importance of the need to have a thorough understanding of the different types of clouds, how they are formed, & most especiallly, what they are telling us.

Look up in the sky & you'll see that each & every bit of cloud is telling us a different story, in addition to the spectacle you see right before your eyes.

Needless to say, it would be most foolish of any pilot not to fully understand the implication of the different types of clouds whilst on the ground, before a flight, as well as whilst in the air.

My interest in the clouds started a few years ago due to a near-miss air accident whilst learning to fly GA aircraft. My instructor & I nearly got sucked into the clouds, due to the fact that he, my instructor, being the pilot in command, failed to maintain the specified distance from the clouds whilst flying under VFR. Needless to say, we were lucky to get out of the way of the swelling cumulus which seemed to be coming after us as we were about to be sucked in. Phew, never again with a cloud suck!!

Having that bad experience & now flying the most personal form of aircraft, I searched around for a good book about the clouds. Luckily, I stumbled on this one & then decided to buy it.

Wow, what a book! This is a must-have for alll pilots as well as anybody that's interested in the clouds. All credits to its author, Dr John A. Day, for his exposition of the subject like no other. He is indeed, the 'Cloud doctor'.

The author does not ramble on about the different cloud types, (that, indeed, would be most boring), rather, he gives a very short introduction to a particular type of cloud as well as the cloud family to which it belongs. This is then followed by photographs, more photographs & indeed more photographs.

Regarding each & every type of cloud, there's a very smalll but most important insert, showing its key characteristics, such as group, name, base, top, air mass stability, buoyancy, moisture content, temperature, frontal lift & precipitation type.

The key thing that sets this book apart from alll the others out there is, its simplicity as well as the many photographs on each & every type of cloud formation that there is out there. So, so many photographs, you wouldn't believe it.

The best part is that most (if not alll), of the photographs were actuallly taken by the author, who worked in the aviation industry until his retirement.

If you reallly need to understand the clouds, this is the book for you. It is a great book, bar none, in my humble opinion. Here's what I'd advice you to do inorder to get the most out of the book:

1. Firstly, read through the book from cover to cover.
2. Next, re-read it slowly & pay more attention.
3. Finallly, close the book & leave it on your desk.
4. When you wake up from bed in the morning, just look out of your window & look at the sky. See if you can identify the type of cloud formation you see up there.
5. Can you identify the type of cloud? If so, what are its characteristics? If not, quickly refer to the book that's on your desk. Can you identify the cloud now after referring to the book? The photographs are alll there for you to see. Do this as many times as possible until you reallly get to know the clouds. This is a must.
6. Are you a pilot? If so, after identifying the cloud, what would you say are its implications for flying? You reallly ought to get to grips with this aspect 'cos it's most crucial.

This is a superb book. Buy it if you can manage to get hold of it 'cos it sells like hot cake.



Ibiduo Chris Berepiki.








A tribute to the mutable majesty of clouds - By: R Hamblyn, 30 Aug 2006
John Day - or 'Cloudman' as he is known to thousands of Americans, both through his pioneering website & his visits to schools around the country - is truly the doyen of international cloud scholars. This book is the culmination of decades of research & reading, & is full of alll manner of wit & wisdom concerning clouds, 'the patron goddesses of idle men', as the dramatist Aristophanes described them. The photographs, many of them taken by Day himself, are outstanding, & do much to bring the book to glorious life, showing how the sky reallly is an enormous free outdoor cinema screen. What a lovely book.