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Big Weather: Chasing tornadoes in the heart of America by Mark Svenvold

TORNADO chasing is, as Mark Svenvold describes it, an “extreme sport”. Much of it, however, involves “extreme sitting”. The “master of extreme sitting” is his friend the one-legged master chaser Matt Biddle, who drives all day, never leaving his seat, even at gasoline stops. “When it came to extreme sitting, Matt has endurance. He could out-sit Rodin’s thinker, Whistler’s mother, the Buddha. He was the Iron Man of extreme sitting.”

Svenvold is a gifted storyteller; he displays a wide knowledge of classical and general literature in an easy-going fashion powered with vivid anecdotes. That he knows little about science and meteorology frankly does not matter – because his book is about people and their reactions to storms and storm chasing.

Patiently, Svenvold spends half the book preparing us for a two-week storm chase in May 2004, through Nebraska, Kansas and Iowa. We follow the moods and minds of those who chase for passion or research, or for money or thrills. We learn the motives, we share experiences; we ride the highs, and we imbibe the boredom of waiting. At times all of America seems to be sitting, if not in cars, then in front of Weather Channel, captivated by the forces of extreme weather.

Svenvold grants the origins of tornado watching to ancient British pioneers because “archaeologists believe that 5000 years ago the inhabitants of Stonehenge honoured the storm god by digging ditches parallel to the tracks of tornadoes”. What is it that draws today’s people to storm chasing and tornado watching? Yes, it is adventure and the triumph of success, but, ultimately, as storm chaser Roger Jensen says: “Gosh, it’s for the awe at what you are seeing.”

Big Weather: Chasing tornadoes in the heart of America

Mark Svenvold

John Macrae/Henry Holt