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Lädt ... Rain: A Natural and Cultural History (2015. Auflage)von Cynthia Barnett
Werk-InformationenRain: A Natural and Cultural History von Cynthia Barnett
Lädt ...
Melde dich bei LibraryThing an um herauszufinden, ob du dieses Buch mögen würdest. Keine aktuelle Diskussion zu diesem Buch. really enjoyed this book. while there were serious scientific sections, explanations of forecasting and climate change, there were also sections on rain in the arts, on a village in India that captures the scent of rain and on rain in mythology and folklore. From strange rains of fish and golf balls to the development of the mackintosh, this book had it all ( ) Дождь за окном – самое время пристроиться где-нибудь в тепле с чашечкой чего-нибудь погорячее и начать про этот самый дождь читать. Для этого занятия как раз подойдет книга, собравшая немало премий и рассказывающая об этих осадках немало такого, о чем ни в школе не учат, ни Гидрометцентр не просветит. Дождь из рыбин, регулярно выпадающий в Гондурасе, породил популярный фестиваль; американский метеоканал-сенсация (в него, как и в MTV, сперва никто не верил) был куплен за 3,5 млрд долларов; в Индии особой популярностью пользуются духи с ароматом дождя, а капли воды, падающие с неба, на самом деле похожи на парашюты, а не на привычные конусы. Дождь помогает некоторым орхидеям размножаться, армия США разрабатывала против него операции, а Фредерик Шопен лучше всех «сыграл» дождь в прелюдии «Дождевая капля». Дождеведение действительно получилось занимательным: непогода пролетит за чтением незаметно, если конечно вы не в Уганде на озере Виктория, где грозы грохочут 242 дня в году. Longfellow also wrote what is arguably rain’s most famous refrain, the closing lines of “The Rainy Day”: Into each life some rain must fall Some days must be dark and dreary. (Kindle Locations 2911-2913) The best chapters: RAIN FOLLOWS THE PLOW WRITERS ON THE STORM STRANGE RAIN After reading Rain there is nothing else to say about the rain (apart from going outdoors forgetting the umbrella). Quotes: Many archaeologists believe Homo sapiens built their big brain power during these rain-starved times, evolving speech to share what they knew about water and food to survive famine. (Kindle Locations 465-467) In Sanskrit, the word for rain, varsha, is derived from the older vrish, which means not only “to rain,” but also “to have manly power” and “generative vigor.” Hindus consider rivers female, and sometimes describe those swollen with monsoon rains as pregnant. (Kindle Locations 879-881) And the lives of gods including revered Krishna are intimately tied to rain. Krishna’s skin is storm-blue, and his name means “dark as a storm cloud.” Rain follows him from the day of his birth to a royal family in Mathura during a terrific storm. The tempest helps obscure a ruse when his father secrets Krishna across the Yamuna River (the largest tributary of the Ganges) to switch him with the newborn child of a cowherd couple so he won’t be murdered by Mathura’s wicked ruler. (Kindle Locations 933-936) The Welsh, who have more than two dozen words for rain, like to say that it’s raining old women and walking sticks. Afrikaans-speakers have a version that rains old women with knobkerries (that would be clubs). The Polish, French, and Australians all have a twist on raining frogs; the Aussies sometimes call a hard rain a frog-strangler. Portuguese- and Spanish-speakers both might say it’s raining jugs. (Kindle Locations 1131-1134) Rain can warp, swell, discolor, rust, loosen, mildew, stink, peel paint, consume wood, erode masonry, corrode metal, expand destructively when it freezes, or seep into every crack when it evaporates. (Kindle Locations 1870-1871) Later in the 1920s, Wright’s cousin Richard Lloyd Jones Sr., publisher of the afternoon newspaper in Tulsa, Oklahoma, commissioned him to build a home there. Jones was worried about the textile blocks in an area with more rain than the West, and rightly so. Despite heroic waterproofing attempts, the home, Westhope, was perpetually damp. The roof leaked almost immediately after Jones moved in. He called in roofers to resurface, in vain. He went to his desk and placed a call: “Dammit, Frank—it’s leaking on my desk!” Wright calmly replied, “Why don’t you move your desk?” (Kindle Locations 1893-1897) Rain “is a power which none but God can rule with justice. (Kindle Location 2384) Now that modern humans could fly like the gods of mythology, could they also make it rain like Jupiter Pluvius? (Kindle Location 2601) Perhaps more than in music or any other genre, rain, so fit for meter and metaphor, speaks in the language of poetry. Anthologies seem to have no end of poems titled “Rain,” or those devoted to April rain, May rain, August rain, September rain, summer rain, noon rain, night rain, and London rain—and all of that not even counting showers. (Kindle Locations 2903-2905) In The Old Curiosity Shop, when Little Nell’s grandfather steals her savings, she rises from her bed in the dark night while “the rain beat fast and furiously without, and ran down in plashing streams from the thatched roof.” (Kindle Locations 2954-2956) The American writer Edward Lewis Wallant, compared with Bellow and Roth before he died in his thirties, does it in his novel The Pawnbroker, foreshadowing a troubled young character’s redemption with a walk in a storm: “The fiery exultation of evil drained out of him then, and he walked home, all hunched over, nailed heavily to the earth by the torrential downpour.” (Kindle Locations 2990-2992) To Sanjiv Chopra, the Indian American Harvard Medical School physician and author, like his younger brother Deepak Chopra, the loamy smell of long-awaited rains soaking India’s thirsty ground is “the scent of life itself.” (Kindle Locations 3161-3163) Extracted from parched clay on the eve of the monsoons, and distilled with techniques dating to the Harappan, the scent of rain, in India, is known as Earth’s perfume. (Kindle Locations 3189-3190) ...humanity has managed to change the rain. (Kindle Location 3978) In The Martian Chronicles, Ray Bradbury wrote that the Martians “blended religion and art and science because, at base, science is no more than an investigation of a miracle we can never explain, and art is an interpretation of that miracle.” (Kindle Locations 4100-4102) Rain plays such a vital role in our lives. Perhaps the most vital role of all. Which allowed author Cynthia Barnett to examine this vitality from such a varied and fascinating amount of different perspectives. One of my favorite chapters was Writers on The Storm where Barnett examined the ways in which rain shaped and influenced such a wide variety of musicians and writers, featuring the likes of Morrisey, Kurt Coabain, Chopin, Isak Dinesen, Charles Darwin,Henry Longfellow, EmilyDickinson, Woody Allen,and Thomas Hardy, just to name a few. I also thoroughly enjoyed the chapter The Scent of Rain where learn how the people of an Indian village have for generation after generation figured out a way to produce and sell the smell of rain from clay deposits located in their village. This scent is called the smell of India.Who needs perfume when you have the smell of fresh rain. Not me, that's for sure.
Toward the end of her book, Barnett draws again from Ray Bradbury’s “Martian Chronicles.” Bradbury wrote that his imagined Martians “blended religion and art and science because, at base, science is no more than an investigation of a miracle we can never explain, and art is an interpretation of that miracle.” In essence, this blending is exactly what Barnett does for rain, merging religion and art and science to capture a gestalt, one best considered and appreciated somewhere less than dry, perhaps during a wet morning on a soaked trail, where printed pages can be baptized by the very substance that is their subject. AuszeichnungenPrestigeträchtige Auswahlen
Cynthia Barnett's "Rain "begins four billion years ago with the torrents that filled the oceans, and builds to the storms of climate change. It weaves together science--the true shape of a raindrop, the mysteries of frog and fish rains--with the human story of our ambition to control rain, from ancient rain dances to the 2,203 miles of levees that attempt to straitjacket the Mississippi River. As climate change upends rainfall patterns and unleashes increasingly severe storms and drought, Barnett shows rain to be a unifying force in a fractured world. Keine Bibliotheksbeschreibungen gefunden. |
LibraryThing Early Reviewers-AutorCynthia Barnetts Buch Rain wurde im Frührezensenten-Programm LibraryThing Early Reviewers angeboten. Aktuelle DiskussionenKeineBeliebte Umschlagbilder
Google Books — Lädt ... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)551.57Natural sciences and mathematics Earth sciences & geology Geology, Hydrology Meteorology Meteorology; Climate Moisture: rainfall, flow of streams, floodsKlassifikation der Library of Congress [LCC] (USA)BewertungDurchschnitt:
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