The weather used to be reported after the news; today, it often is the news. Tracking news-making weather, storm chasers seek dramatic images of tornadoes, hurricanes, blizzards, lightning storms, and other extreme and unusual weather phenomena. News organizations compete to broadcast and publish these images because people care passionately about the weather.
Jim Reed is one of America’s most successful and award-winning storm chasers in an era when global climate is changing. His fifteen years of photography documents this change. As the years go by, he sees spring come earlier, summers get hotter, and tornadoes and hurricanes increase in frequency and intensity. In Storm Chaser , a beautiful picture book about some of the most powerful—and sometimes deadly—phenomena in our world, Reed shares his best images and his experiences as he tracks these storms throughout the country.
Beautiful photographic journey of a storm chaser's experiences both jaw dropping and life-threatening. Loved it and has begun a fascination for storm chasing!
The title pretty well introduces the book, although the author/photographer doesn't seem like a daredevil, as may be suggested by the job. Primarily, Reed seems to be a concerned citizen and reporter of changes in our world. Beautiful photos with scary details about the increased occurrence and intensity of storms. Well written (although in rather small print).
I was somewhat frustrated by the organization of the book, which is why I only gave this 3.5 stars. Otherwise, I'd say 4 or 4.5. I wanted look at the photos Jim Reed took during the storms he was writing about while I was reading, but they were quite difficult to find. I would have organized the book differently so the photos were more closely aligned with the text, at least in the same order in which they were discussed.
This book is well worth looking through even if you don't read it all....and well worth taking the time to read despite minor difficulties.
The are some absolutely beautiful photographs of all weather - not just tornados. Some of the sunsets he captured are breathtaking.
My problem comes 1) with the fact that his dialogue is SUPER choppy. He jumps around states and years like it's nothing. It's very confusing to get a solid grasp on the timeline of events and 2) this is a slightly older book, so the big storms of the last five years or so are not included which in understandable, but sad and 3) Reed seems very focused on global warming/ climate change as a scapegoat for all bad weather. Is it a factor - yep. Is the sole reason we get so much bad weather - nope. Sorry other environmental aspects play a role too.
Beautiful pics, but the preaching got old after a while.