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Surfers, sailors, and anyone who loves the ocean will enjoy this visual exploration of the world's seas along its shores, including rip tides, swells, waves, and tsunamis. Tide is the vertical motion of water, something so subtle it is impossible to see with the naked eye. Inspired by his travels around the world's coastline in a camper van with his young family, William Thomson captures the cycles of the sea's movement, and intersperses his adventures surfing the waves and charting the tides. Throughout Tides and the Ocean are his graphic renderings of unusual tidal maps, as well as other forms of water movement, including rip, rapids, swell, stream, tide, wave, whirlpool, and tsunami. Tides and the Ocean explains how the tides surge when the moon and sun align with the earth; how ocean streams alternate direction every six hours (which is invaluable information for kayakers, paddle boarders, and fishermen); why skyscraper-sized tsunamis occur frequently in an Alaskan Bay; and the most deadly beach orientation for rip currents. Also emphasized throughout is the importance of keeping the world's oceans healthy and full of life. Published in time for beach travel, this large-format hardcover is ideal for anyone who knows and loves the sea, and who wants to understand, discover, surf, or sail it better. Review: Beautiful book - Innovative presentation of something beyond global that people rarely notice locally in their distracted lives Review: Disappointing - I had hoped for something more detailed and technical, with decent graphics, but no- this book seems aimed at middle-school students rather than adults. Cursory explanations of some interesting phenomena, but goes off on tangents away from the subject of tidal variation. The author is clearly a believer in anthropogenic global warming, and states projected sea level rise values as fact. The lack of decent graphics or photographs is inexcusable- they are easily captured and published these days.
| Best Sellers Rank | 834,155 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) 382 in Oceanography 913 in Physical Geography 1,704 in Boating |
| Customer Reviews | 4.3 out of 5 stars 34 Reviews |
S**.
Beautiful book
Innovative presentation of something beyond global that people rarely notice locally in their distracted lives
G**N
Disappointing
I had hoped for something more detailed and technical, with decent graphics, but no- this book seems aimed at middle-school students rather than adults. Cursory explanations of some interesting phenomena, but goes off on tangents away from the subject of tidal variation. The author is clearly a believer in anthropogenic global warming, and states projected sea level rise values as fact. The lack of decent graphics or photographs is inexcusable- they are easily captured and published these days.
M**H
A Coffee Table Book on Tides -- Short on Substance, Poor Graphics
Written by a surfer and paddleboarder, William Thomson, this is a large-sized coffee table book on such topics as tides, tsunamis, and plastic in the worlds oceans. Part travelogue and memoire, the text jumps around from topic to topic. Nearly each page of text on the left is accompanied by a graphic created by the author on the right. Unfortunately, the highly stylized graphics, done with tablet on computer, look like corporate logos or the designs you might find on a t-shirt at surf shop, and don't do a good job of conveying information. Thomson surrounds nearly every diagram with the same circle against a gray backdrop with serves no purpose. Information that is best presented in three-dimensions is often represented in two which is very confusing. Maps in the diagrams, of which there are very many, are simply black landmasses with no detail against a gray background and are very difficult to interpret. The graphics are very lazily created, often made of featureless polygons. The low point in the book for me was on page 111, where the author portrays an incoming meteor as long, two-tone gray rectangular solid with a red tail that looks like a jet exhaust. It looks a kid's wooden block from a building block set that is somehow is appearing on horizon. A wide-ranging traveler, the author describes many interesting places he's seen, like the Saltstaumen Whirlpool in Norway and the Qiantang River Tidal Bore, but there are no photographs whatsoever in the book, so it's hard to get an idea of what the author is talking about from just his laconic descriptions and distorted diagrams. The author is no scientist and no science writer with a gift for explanation, so it's not worth reading the book through for the few interesting tidbits of information you might glean. In short this is book that might be pretty to look at for some, but not for those who want to learn about tides, tsunamis, waves, or other aspects of oceanography.
T**N
Use a lot of words to talk about simple concept
A little too pricey
M**Y
Mostly window dressing, but interesting and well-organized into bite-sized sections.
Nice coffee table book for sure, but the very light, artsy-craftsy, tiny sans-serif type ruins for serious study.
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