Furthermore: Where the Headlines Take You
In recent days the completion of the world's tallest building was announced and 6'8" Brittney Griner became the second woman to dunk more than once in a single NCAA basketball game prompting the question, "How's the air up there?" In the case of the newly minted Burj Dubai (which reaches 2,717 ft in to the sky) the air at the top is a full 8 degrees cooler than at the bottom. This necessitates a complex series of airlocks through out the building to dampen the possibility of sudden shifts in air pressure causing structural damage to the superskyscraper. For Griner the question would be the sort of playful comment that is a bit of a back-handed compliment but make no mistake, her arrival in the WNBA will have serious implications. She has serious talent to go with her height. But really, how is the air up there?
Gabrielle Walker's An Ocean of Air: Why the Wind Blows and Other Mysteries of the Atmosphere provides a variety of insights about the air around us. From Colonel Joseph Kittinger's record setting skydive from an altitude of 102,800 feet (in 1960!) to the recent scientific supposition that precipitation is seeded by unseen and omnipresent atmospheric bacteria, An Ocean of Air weaves an amazing tale from historical and scientific elements. Walker's text alternates between the fascinating stories of those who have studied the air around us and the implications of their findings. An Ocean of Air's quick pace and engaging articulation of complex scientific concepts makes for a great contrast to the ephemeral and essential nature of its subject. As the author suggests in finalizing her description of Kittinger's death defying fall to earth, "We don't just live in the air. We live because of it."
Kittinger's awe inspiring military mission was scientific in purpose but shared a passion for adventure with the subjects of Michael Abrams' Birdmen, Batmen and Skyflyers: Wingsuits and the Pioneers Who Flew Them, Fell in Them, and Perfected Them. Here Abrams reveals the history of the questionable and highly hazardous pursuit of flight using wingsuits. Many of the stories included here end poorly for the participants; broken bones and death are fairly predictable outcomes. Still, Birdmen, Batmen and Skyflyers captures a sort of lunatic mania that is inspiring. From that most famous of men to theorize about (and perhaps attempt) winged flight, Leonardo da Vinci, through the golden era of wingsuits and into today's scientific advances, which allow for accomplishments such as Felix Baumgartner's crossing of the English Channel in a wingsuit, Birdmen, Batmen and Skyflyers contains some truly batty tales!
Gasp! The Swift and Terrible Beauty of Air personalizes the gases around us and waxes philosophical on how our human experience is necessarily and inextricably immersed in the nature of air. Beginning with an infant's first breath Joe Sherman plots a course through the history of air that touches such seemingly unrelated topics as; the evolutionary source of fear in humans, the return of life to Krakatau, how and why mammals returned to the sea as whales, why you should never get between a hippo and the water, the physiology of hearing and the etymology of the Arabic word for absurd. Those topics are discussed over the course of just three pages and all within the context of how air defines and informs our human existence. Yes, Gasp! is dense, it may even leave you breathless, but Sherman's writing is more inspirational than existential so it's well worth diving in!
Posted by Matthew
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