Cover Image: Reading the Glass

Reading the Glass

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Member Reviews

Where Weather and the Sea Intersect
Elliot Rappaport is a ship’s captain, one of the few 21st-century professional sailing ship captains. He has commanded Corwith Creamer and Robert C. Seamans, ships that serve simultaneously as oceanographic research and sail training vessels. A lifetime at sea has led him to develop a fascination with weather.

“Reading the Glass: A Captain’s View of Weather, Water, and Life on Ships,” by Elliot Rappaport, explores that fascination. He draws upon 30 years’ experience at sea to share everything he learned about weather. While it is about seafaring, sailing tall ships in modern times, it is also a look at and inside the science of meteorology and the world of meteorologists.

The book is a sea adventure. Rappaport takes readers with him on voyages to distant reaches of the world. He takes trips to Greenland, the South Pacific, the Mediterranean, and the waters around New Zealand and Australia. He reveals the two most important members of every crew on a long sea voyage are the engineer and the cook.

Within each chapter, he explores different aspects of weather and different weather phenomena. It included an in-depth discussion about the featured phenomenon. Trips serve as a springboard to introduce the how and why of virtually every aspect of meteorology: how arctic weather works, how winds behave, what causes them, and how they interact with water. There are discussions of clouds, what makes them form, and what they portend. He, of course, has a chapter on tropical systems.

He goes beyond talking about the weather. He takes readers inside the world of weather forecasting. There are long, fascinating explorations of the meteorological research and history. He shows how modern meteorologists work and how their predecessors got them there. He also shows future trends in meteorology.

This book is not a polemic on anthropomorphic global warming. Rappaport believes the climate is changing. He shows it has always changed, with or without the intervention of humans. He looks at cause and effect rather than assigning blame. This dispassionate approach is refreshing and valuable. Readers learn about modern metrological science without the hysteria that often accompanies discussions about the weather.

“Reading the Glass” offers readers a painless education in modern meteorology. It is comprehensive without being overly technical. It is thoroughly entertaining, mixing adventure and humor with the facts it dispenses. This book will give readers a new appreciation for today’s weather scientist have and their accomplishments.

“Reading the Glass: A Captain’s View of Weather, Water, and Life on Ships,” by Elliot Rappaport, Dutton, 2023, 336 pages, $30.00 (Hardcover), $15.99 (ebook), $24.50 (audiobook)
This review was written by Mark Lardas, who writes at Ricochet as Seawriter. Mark Lardas, an engineer, freelance writer, historian, and model-maker, lives in League City, TX. His website is marklardas.com.

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Super interesting insight into what it is actually like to live life on the sea. It was engaging and kept my interest

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