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Rain: A Natural and Cultural History, by Cynthia Barnett

Rain: A Natural and Cultural History, by Cynthia Barnett

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Rain: A Natural and Cultural History, by Cynthia Barnett

Rain: A Natural and Cultural History, by Cynthia Barnett



Rain: A Natural and Cultural History, by Cynthia Barnett

Free Ebook Rain: A Natural and Cultural History, by Cynthia Barnett

A natural history of rain, told through a lyrical blend of science, cultural history, and human drama

It is elemental, mysterious, precious, destructive. It is the subject of countless poems and paintings; the top of the weather report; the source of all the world's water. Yet this is the first audiobook to tell the story of rain.

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 colored rains―with the human story of our attempts to control rain, from ancient rain dances to the 2,203 miles of levees that attempt to straitjacket the Mississippi River. It offers a glimpse of our "founding forecaster," Thomas Jefferson, who measured every drizzle long before modern meteorology. Two centuries later, rainy skies would help inspire Morrissey’s mopes and Kurt Cobain’s grunge. Rain is also a travelogue, taking readers to Scotland to tell the surprising story of the mackintosh raincoat, and to India, where villagers extract the scent of rain from the monsoon-drenched earth and turn it into perfume.

Now, after thousands of years spent praying for rain or worshiping it; burning witches at the stake to stop rain or sacrificing small children to bring it; mocking rain with irrigated agriculture and cities built in floodplains; even trying to blast rain out of the sky with mortars meant for war, humanity has finally managed to change the rain. Only not in ways we intended. 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. Too much and not nearly enough, rain is a conversation we share, and this is an audiobook for everyone who has ever experienced it.

Rain: A Natural and Cultural History, by Cynthia Barnett

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #3341136 in Books
  • Published on: 2015-11-16
  • Formats: Audiobook, MP3 Audio, Unabridged
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 6.75" h x .50" w x 5.25" l,
  • Running time: 12 Hours
  • Binding: MP3 CD
Rain: A Natural and Cultural History, by Cynthia Barnett

Review Longlisted for the National Book AwardShortlisted for the PEN/E.O. Wilson Literary Science Writing AwardWinner of the Florida Book Award in General Non-FictionAn NPR Science Friday Best Book of 2015A Boston Globe Best Book of 2015A Tampa Bay Times Favorite Book of 2015A Miami Herald Favorite Book of 2015A Kirkus Reviews Best Book of 2015"Mesmerizing and powerful history. Barnett is a passionate, intrepid journalist whose research has taken her everywhere from a Mackintosh factory in Glasgow to a rickety suspension bridge, made of steel-wire rope, 30 feet above India's Simtung River during monsoon season. Her cultural references are equally far-reaching... Abundant details, spiced with irreverence and humor, are what make this book so delicious. What elevates it and makes it important is Barnett's exploration of humanity's attempts throughout history to prevail over the elements... Reading this book, we are witness to the profoundly flawed, hubristic core of human nature itself."—DANI SHAPIRO, MORE“Transporting…An elemental biography, Rain wanders widely through time and space, packed with intriguing stories…At times playful and at times grand, Barnett discusses the planetary genesis of rain and its influence on agriculture, religion and the arts. She is especially good at making the large and distant close and personal…Throughout, Barnett beats a steady tattoo: whether abundant or scarce, rain has shaped humans.”—ELIZABETH ROYTE, ELLE“Fascinating…Celebrates the beauty of rain…As delicious as all this cultural history is, Barnett is not just sprinkling her pages with trivia. All of the various streams of her research come together in the present in rain as the manifestation of global climate change.”—TAMPA BAY TIMES“Barnett sets an ambitious goal, making something so everyday interesting, even fascinating, and she accomplishes that with far-reaching research and lyrical prose, tracing rain through literature and myth, science and history....In a state where the governor has prohibited the discussion of climate change, Rain is as welcome as a summer afternoon shower on a hot day." —THE MIAMI HERALD"With Rain, Cynthia Barnett will make a rain fanatic out of anyone, not just self-described weather aficionados...Through her approachable and engaging writing, Barnett tells this eclectic story by combining science and history with humor, anecdotes, poetry, and personal travel adventures...Barnett captivates the reader through her unique way of finding a human face to describe historical climate and weather events...In a particularly memorable chapter, 'Writers on the Storm,' Barnett explores the role that rain has played in the creation of art, including the works of Charles Dickens, Emily Dickinson, Frédéric Chopin, The Smiths, Nirvana, and Woody Allen."—SCIENCE"Cynthia Barnett’s eye-opening book is enough to make even the most fervent rain-hater experience a change of heart. From the storms of biblical proportions that lashed the Earth when it was newly formed to why Woody Allen prefers to shoot against a rainy backdrop, Barnett addresses rain’s role in science, culture and history with a forensic eye for detail and a good sense of humour."—FINANCIAL TIMES"Barnett approaches her subject with full recognition of [rain’s] mystery, bringing to it a cogent understanding of rain’s complex part in the hydrologic cycle….She excels at explaining the complexities of that cycle and the consequences of our modern compulsion to manipulate it…Barnett, often wittily, packs her book not only with essential finding, but also small, strange facts: that raindrops, for instance, don’t resemble water dripping from a faucet; rather they fall from the clouds in the shape of tiny parachutes, their tops rounded because of air pressure from below."—ORION"Lively, wide-ranging, and sensitive...Entertaining as well as wise...Barnett uses rain as a prism through which to gaze at a much larger picture—one in which the human desire to control the world often rebounds in unfortunate ways, and the equally strong desires to understand and appreciate sometimes compensate for the effort to strong-arm nature into submission."—COLUMBUS DISPATCH“A perfectly balanced book of general-interest science and boots-on-the-ground journalism, the ominous threat of what we have done to our weather hangs over the pages like dark summer thunderheads.”—MINNEAPOLIS STAR TRIBUNE“Everyone thinks about rain, but few have done so more than environmental journalist Cynthia Barnett. In her new book, Rain: A Natural and Cultural History, she explores every possible aspect of rain you can think of, and probably many you didn’t consider. We learn about the origin of rain jackets, the aroma of rain, how Daniel Defoe helped popularize umbrellas, why it occasionally rains frogs, whether rain actually did follow the plow, and why we need to worry about climate change…One of her most fascinating sections is on the language of rain.”—SEATTLE TIMES“Barnett weaves together a compelling set of human tales that carry [her readers] through millennia and around the world, often in vivid and lyrical prose that is leavened with humor.”—DALLAS MORNING NEWS"Maybe because it’s as refreshing as its title, or maybe because it reminded me of spring, but Rain: A Natural and Cultural History made me very happy. That stuff that falls from the sky isn’t strictly what this book is all about, though. Author Cynthia Barnett also touches upon history, biology, Earth science, global warming and all kinds of tiny facets of culture. We’re sprinkled with delightful surprises, as well as terrifying tales of droughts and floods, then introduced to majesty on one page and destruction two pages later....This book practically screams for weather fans to own it.” —SAVANNAH MORNING NEWS“Rain, as Barnett lovingly portrays it, is one of our most profound shared human experiences, a source not just of life, but of art and religion, and a reminder, in modern times, of our connection to nature. But it’s not, as she demonstrates over and over again, something we always approach with strict rationality.”—SALON"A multifaceted examination of the science, the art, the technology and even the smell of rain throughout history… Highlights the severity of some of our environmental problems with knowledge, humor, urgency and hope." '—KIRKUS REVIEWS, starred "A seamless blending of personal narrative with scientific and cultural explanations...Fans of Mary Roach will recognize a similar ease of style and interjection of wit…Accessible to every reader, from the environmental scientist to the parent choosing whether their child needs to wear a raincoat that day."—LIBRARY JOURNAL, starred"A spectacularly vivid, all-encompassing history of rain... Like John McPhee, Jared Diamond, and Elizabeth Kolbert, Barnett illuminates a crucial subject with knowledge, energy, conviction, and a passion for mind-expanding facts and true stories."—BOOKLIST, starred"Barnett beautifully evokes universal themes of connecting cycles of water, air, wind, and earth to humankind across time and culture, leaving readers contemplating their deeper ties with the natural world."—PUBLISHERS WEEKLY"Rain is a lovely, lyrical, deeply informative book. It will change the way you look at gray skies, and sunny ones, too."—ELIZABETH KOLBERT, author of The Sixth Extinction “In Rain, Cynthia Barnett has given us a landmark work of environmental history. She brilliantly illuminates the essential weather conditions that allow our blue-marble earth to exist. From now on I'll think about raindrops differently. Rain is a triumph.” —DOUGLAS BRINKLEY, author of The Wilderness Warrior; professor of history, Rice University  "Rain—the thing the weatherman frowns about—is one of the planet's great pulses, as this marvelous book makes clear. Read it now, recalling the rainstorms we grew up with, and anticipating the harsh new rainfall that's coming our way on a warming globe."—BILL McKIBBEN, author of Eaarth "Brilliant, insightful, and beautifully written. Raindrops are prisms through which we see the surprising and profound connections among water, human history, and our uncertain future."—DAVID GEORGE HASKELL, author of The Forest Unseen; professor of biology, University of the South "Some of the most lyrical and surprising nature writing that I have ever read. This book is filled with wonder, as mysterious as the shape of a falling raindrop, which is not the drop we imagine, but a concave little parachute drifting to the earth below. After reading this, you will never look up the same way again."—RICHARD LOUV, author of Last Child in the Woods "Rain is one of the most elegant and absorbing books ever written about the natural world. Writing with grace and imagination, Cynthia Barnett takes you on a journey into the heart of the most elemental force in our lives. An important, revelatory, and thoroughly wondrous book."—WILLIAM SOUDER, author of On a Farther Shore: The Life and Legacy of Rachel Carson "Captivating and compelling, a delightful celebration of precipitation that is brimming with insight. Whether you’re desperate for more of it or you just wish it would stop, you’ll never think of rain in the same way again."—GAVIN PRETOR-PINNEY, author of The Cloud Collector’s Handbook "Cynthia Barnett looks at the human relationship to rain—from Noah, to Thomas Jefferson, to our own conflicted attitudes. The result is a book of unexpected connections and wonderful surprises. It will give you more respect for every rainstorm you experience, and more joy in the raindrops."—CHARLES FISHMAN, author of The Big Thirst: The Secret Life and Turbulent Future of Water "Barnett’s beautifully written book envelops the reader in warm shower of intriguing history and fascinating science. Anyone who looks longingly at rain clouds, rejoices in a spring downpour, or frets about drought, will love Rain."—DANIEL CHAMOVITZ, author of What a Plant Knows; Director, Manna Center for Plant Biosciences, Tel Aviv University"Like the weather, there's no predicting the delightful and sometimes disturbing surprises waiting on every page of Rain. Whether she's writing about Mesopotamia or the Met Office, Cynthia Barnett illuminates the hidden connections that tie our fate to a precious resource we neglect at our peril."—DAN FAGIN, author of the Pulitzer Prize-winning Toms River: A Story of Science and Salvation "Rain is one of those uncommonly wonderful books that are both highly significant and deeply pleasurable to read. As we face the coming time of storms, of flood and drought, nothing will be more important than rain. So all gratitude to Cynthia Barnett for writing a book that is clear, surprising, and filled with fascination."—KATHLEEN DEAN MOORE, co-editor of Moral Ground: Ethical Action for a Planet in Peril "If you care about this planet, you're lucky that Cynthia Barnett writes so elegantly and intelligently about the stuff that falls on it. It's kind of ironic--like rain on your wedding day?--that the folly of mankind's relentless efforts to control the earth's water has inspired Barnett's best work yet."—MICHAEL GRUNWALD, author of The Swamp: The Everglades, Florida, and the Politics of ParadiseFrom the Hardcover edition.

About the Author Cynthia Barnett is a longtime environmental journalist who has reported on water from the Suwannee River to Singapore. She is the author of two previous books, Mirage and Blue Revolution, a Boston Globe top 10 science book of 2011. She lives in Gainesville, Florida, with her husband and children. Visit her website at cynthiabarnett.net.


Rain: A Natural and Cultural History, by Cynthia Barnett

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Most helpful customer reviews

11 of 11 people found the following review helpful. Everything, Except Boring By David Valentino It rained pretty much the entire time I read Cynthia Barnett's opus to rain, and continues to rain as I recommend her book to you. Much of the book is lyrical; it comprehensively covers rain; and it dispenses both useful information, insights, and trivia. If you remember nothing else after finishing, you'll hopefully remember that weather, and its component rain, is not simply a local phenomena; it is an intricately interconnected and interdependent system that can be, and is being, disrupted and changed in various parts of the world. These changes effect everybody.Barnett divides the story into five sections. In Elemental Rain, she shows how rain helped in the creation and destruction of civilizations. As in all the sections and chapters, she enthralls you with interesting facts, such as the shape of a raindrop and this reminder (in case you've forgotten, as I had): "As children we learn that water is old and constant; we drink the same water the dinosaurs did." Floods and droughts get attention, as well as how people throughout time have implored their various deities for rain to come or go.Chance of Rain tells about those who began recording and sharing weather information. Among them, the author Daniel Defoe, who in 1703, after experiencing the greatest storm ever to assault the British Isles, gathered the recollections of others, published The Storm (Penguin Classics), and lent his hand to launching weather journalism.American Rain offers us tales of the first weather forecasters, how weather influenced the fulfillment of Manifest Destiny, and how when rain disappeared or diminished to normal patterns rainmakers drummed their brands of salvation. Some of what you'll read will strike you as so outlandish as to have you scratching your head in wonderment, particularly the disappearance of the great American desert. That is, a long but temporary change in mid west U.S. rain patterns from arid to wet. People subscribed to the notion that settlement and human labor led to better weather conditions; railroads and land developers promoted the idea. Of course, when weather reverted to the norm, payback proved quite unpleasant.Lovers of literature will enjoy Capturing the Rain. Here, Barnett illustrates how weather and rain influenced and continues to influence writers and other creators of our fine arts. She also helps us understand why rain smells as it does, and the impact of rain in cities.Finally in Mercurial Rain, she delights us with many curiosities of rain, among them raining fish and frogs, and rains of various colors. In her final chapter, she addresses how humankind is contributing to rapid climate change and how we'd be best to listen to our climate scientists, as opposed to our vocal deniers.Whether you read it on a sunny or rainy day, you'll enjoy and learn from Rain: A Natural and Cultural History.

21 of 24 people found the following review helpful. Very interesting "niche" science - but not a niche at all, rather a vital cog in our existence By Nathan Webster I really enjoy books on niche history and in this case "niche science." And this is a great job. But - to call this "niche" anything is sort of silly, since rain is something so vital to very existence. The neat focus that Cynthia Barnett attached to so many aspects of this weather phenomenon kept me reading straight through. I quite enjoyed it!What she does best is not overwhelm the reader with too much of any one thing. So there's a chapter on "rainmakers" who are no better than charlatans, of course. But they are able to sort of convince people they know what they're doing because even in dry times it DOES rain. The worst example is the guy who said he could make it rain - then it rains, floods, kills a bunch of people - and he wants to get paid becuase, after all, he did hit the mark! Of course, it's silly, since he had nothing to do with making rain at all. Although later science is actually able to slightly manipulate clouds and weather.As the title says, this is a cultural history as well. It was pretty neat reading how much 'rain' has entered our popular culture, from its possible effect on Kurt Cobain's music, to Emily Dickinson's poetry, or certainly Charles Dickens writing.The chapter on strange rain is gloomy, indeed. London's deadly Great Fog occurred because of how rain mixed with pollution. Even normal falling rain looks fresh and pure, but because we're pumping so much poison into the air, it inevitably must come back down. Acid rain, heavy metals and all sorts of other longterm health threats are coming our way."Rain" seems so simple. We don't think about when it's not there (until we need it) and we're desperate to be rid of it when it won't stop (until we need it). Every part of our life requires that we get the right amount at the right time in the right place. The drought patterns and dust storms show that when we take nature for granted, that the human race never, ever comes out ahead.

10 of 11 people found the following review helpful. Bound To Be One Of The Best NonFiction Books Of The Year By Tristan A. Hayes Rain is easily up there for one of the easiest and fastest nonfiction reads out there. The writer makes the subject pretty fascination. Her way of writing brings to life Rain in numerous ways. From the telling of its effect on the development of clothing and arts (like Mackintosh's) to even its effect on numerous world religions from of course the four great river valley locations to even middle ages Europe to modern times with great storms and hurricanes, Rain;s effect on life is brought to life in a fascinating way. I enjoyed this book and will easily recommend it to many others who are interested in its effects.The book goes even into detail about the effects on the lack of rain or even people being deluded by times of great rain. For example the book describes the time from the Louisiana purchase in which people saw the change of the Great American Desert to a region of great rains and plentiful farming to times of drought and then great rain again and ultimately back to the time of the American Dust Bowl and even drought across the entire country (I believe it was 46 of 48 states). It even went into some detail about the current one happening in California and other parts of the west. Additionally issues concerning availability of water to the environment and even people in places like Los Angelas and Miami was detailed. If there was one thing I wanted from this was a bit more on the human engineering potion of this. The Los Angelas and Miami part covered this but if she had detailed human pipeline plumbing for bringing water to the masses, not just the diverting of stormwater to the ocean and now back to natural reservoirs (of course polluted), then I think the book would have even been more fascinating than it already was.I really love how its more than just a science factoid book but one with live people talking about its effects on them and the numerous ways its been important in life. Some of the minor snippets included are relevant to today from the development of the Climate center in america, to the weather channel, to clothing and even rubber, there is something for everyone interested in how science can affect culture and more.Definitely pick this up

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Rain: A Natural and Cultural History, by Cynthia Barnett

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