Visitors to Britain are often bemused by the amount of time people here spend talking about the weather.

If you eavesdrop on any encounter between two people, in the street, a shop or a waiting room, you can bet that within the first couple of minutes at least one of them will comment on how hot/cold/wet/windy/humid it is that day. You’ll also hear the same phrases used frequently — “good for the garden” is a favourite one on a rainy day after a prolonged spell of dry weather while “heat waves” (which seldom last longer than a few days”) will typically get the “we need a good storm to clear this” reaction.

Why we have this fascination with the weather is a mystery to me — maybe it’s favoured because it’s an easy, non threatening topic and something that people, especially strangers, have in common. Or is it that we are uncomfortable making small talk?? If you think you know the answer, do let me know!

In the meantime let’s get down to the business of today’s Top Ten Tuesday topic. There is a link with my ramblings I promise.

Today’s prompt is “Books with Weather Events in the Title/on the Cover.” My list of ten includes books I’ve read and those which are yet to be read. Links take you to reviews where they exist.

Strange Weather in Tokyo by Hiromi Kawakami 

I don’t think the plot has anything to do with the weather but I thought the title in a year which has seen multiple extreme weather-related events around the globe: from soaring temperatures and wild fires in Greece to flash floods in New York. It’s among my stack of unread books.

Instructions for a Heatwave by Maggie O’Farrell 

The weather does play a role in this novel. The British heatwave of 1976 provides a background for a tale of a family crisis triggered when a woman wakes on a stultifying July morning to find that her husband of forty years has gone to get the paper and vanished, cleaning out his bank account along the way.  When the couple’s three children converge on the family home, jealousies; hostilities and stand offs are all revealed.

Cloudstreet by Tim Winton

Very few clouds but plenty of sunshine to be seen in one of Winton’s best known novels. It’s a wonderful sprawling tale of two families who share Number 1 Cloudstreet, a large ramshackle house in a suburb of Perth. Over the course of 20 years we see these two families, whose attitudes to life couldn’t be more different, wrangle; laugh; love; struggle; separate and occasionally come together. 

History of the Rain by Niall Williams

Ruth Swain lies in a boat-shaped bed in an attic, watching rain streaming on to the skylight. It rains a lot in Ireland she thinks, though it’s unlikely to be true that it hasn’t stopped raining since the sixteenth-century. Williams’ novel is an odd one. Ruth is an engaging character – how could she fail to be othrwise when she is surrounded by books shelves full to toppling and an intention to read her way through her late father’s collection of  3,958 books.

Heat and Dust by Ruth Prawer Jhabvala

The winner of the Booker Prize in 1975, this is a novel which focuses on the cultural divide in India in the 1920s. The plot centres on a British woman who causes. a scandal when she forms a relationship with a Nawab for whom she leaves her husband.

Roll of Thunder, Hear my Cry  by Mildred Taylor

A book for younger readers I was introduced to when i took a course on children’s literature. Taylor’s story has achieved classic status for its treatment of racialism in the rural southern states during the American depression.

Five Days at Memorial: Life and Death in a Storm-Ravaged Hospital – Sheri Fink

In 2005, one of the deadliest hurricanes ever experienced by the USA,  hit southeast Louisiana and southern Mississippi, causing more than 1800 deaths. Fink’s book is an account of how the Memorial Hospital in New Orleans became embroiled in a police investigation and legal battle because of decisions taken during that storm.

What the world didn’t know was that at New Orleans’ Memorial Hospital, right in the centre of the maelstrom, life and death decisions were taken that would become the focus of a legal battle. 

Love in A Cold Climate by Nancy Mitford

Another weather-related title that doesn’t actually feature the weather in the narrative. The coldness here refers. to the indifferent attitude to the marriage market shown by one Polly Hampton, the only child of an immensely rich and very aristocratic  Earl of Montdore. She remains aloof at the debutante balls meant to introduce her to desirable marriage partners; having already decided she will marry her uncle (a lecher and serial womaniser).

Snow Country by Yasunari Kawabata

A short, rather bleak tale of a love affair between  Shimamura, a wealthy intellectual from Tokyo and Komako, a young geisha he met in a remote hot spring town. As the book opens  Shimamura travels to the town in. the depths of winter in the hope of rekindling the affair.

Snow Country by Sebastian Faulks

I used to love this author’s work but the last one I read by him — A Week in December — was disappointing. I’m hoping Snow Country, a 2021 title, will restore my interest in his work. It’s a work of historical fiction spanning the period 1906 to 1933, featuring a snow-bound sanatorium near Vienna and the relationship between a writer and a maid.

Snow by John Banville

This is what I would describe as thoughtful crime fiction. Banville offers an atmosphere-laden locked-room mystery that parallels frosty familial relationships within a ramshackle Irish manor house with the icy roads and snowy landscape outside.

I’ve been surprised how many books I’ve read or own that have weather-related titles. I could easily have added more. So here’s a bonus list of five.

  • Wind in the Willows by Kenneth Grahame
  • Miss Smila’s Feeling for Snow by Peter Høeg
  • Snowblind by Ragnar Jonasson
  • Gone with the Wind by Margaret Mitchell
  • The Shadow of the Wind by Carlos Zafon

36 responses to “Top Ten Tuesday: 10 Weather-Related Book Titles”

  1. Instructions For A Heatwave was the first one that came to mind for me when I saw the title of your post, such a brilliant use of weather phenomena to reflect the plot and emotional arc of the novel. The other that came to mind was Weather (duh) by Jenny Offill – I’ve had it on my to-read shelf for far too long, it comes very highly recommended.

    1. I’ve heard of the Jenny Offill novel – it’s been recommended to me but I think I need to read more of what I already own before buying yet more books

  2. Loved Banville’s Snow but wasn’t a fan of Instructions for a Heatwave.
    As for other books with weather in the title, how about Light on Snow (Anita Shreve), After Rain (William Trevor), Song for an Approaching Storm (Peter Froberg Idling), Thunderstruck & Other Stories (Elizabeth McCracken) and That They May Face the Rising Sun (John McGahern)

    1. I read a few Anita Shreve but this particular one doesn’t ring a bell. You were the person who put me onto the Banville I think. You also recommended the one called April in Spain I think. My husband read it but wasn’t that impressed by it – we do have different tastes though so I might enjoy it more than he did

  3. So many ‘weather’ books!! I’ve read just two of these – I loved Heatwave, but I was disappointed by Snow Country. I’ll be interested to know what you make of it. I’ve also read 4 of the 5 in your bonus list. The other books all interest me – I’d love to read all of them.

    1. Oh well, Snow Country may be the book that makes me decide to part company with Faulks

  4. A wonderful list. There are a couple there I’d like to read. I recently finished Cold Enough for Snow by Jessica Au. It was rainy also.

  5. Some great and unique titles here, fun!
    I still need to read your first book mentioned!

    1. there are always many more books I have not yet that I want to get to

  6. Two of my favorites made your list, Cloudstreet and Love in a Cold Climate

    1. Cloudstreet I loved. Love in a Cold Climate not so much though

  7. This is a fantastic list. I have been checking these lists especially for my husband because he is interested in books on weather, mostly nonfiction, sometime fiction.

    The Maggie O’Farrell book sounds interesting and I have not read any of her writing. Five Days at Memorial sounds overwhelming. I enjoyed Snow by John Banville (as did my husband).

    Your bonus list is good too. I have read Miss Smila’s Feeling for Snow and Snowblind, and both are perfect for this topic. Even though I was born and raised in the Deep South (Alabama, 1949 through 1972), I have never read Gone with the Wind.

    1. 5 Days at Memorial does an excellent job of describing the problems experienced by the hospital when they were cut off by the rising water. The staff were extraordinary and at first they were hailed as heroes. It was only later that questions began about some of the practices

  8. I remember that my eldest son told me he had spoken to a boy at school about the weather. It was their first day at primary school and I was struck by how British it was, despite them being so young!

    1. Its unusual for children to get into that sort of topic. I wonder if the boy had heard his parents having similar conversations and just copied them

  9. Talking about the weather is an easy, innocuous topic that is unlikely to offend anyone. So, its a safe way of reaching out to someone and starting to connect… like tossing them a line. It can be just a way of saying hi, or it can let you “test the waters” and see if they are open to a conversation. Is this post about the same?

    1. I don’t think I was testing the waters as such but I do like it when my posts generate a conversation

  10. There are lots of these! I could think of nearly 10 books I’ve read just with wind in the title (including all of yours.) I read Cloudstreet last year, and enjoyed that a lot.

    1. 10 windy novels would be a great subject line Lory. I’d love to see that one!

  11. Excellent list. I will never get Five Days at Memorial out of my mind

    1. It was an extraordinary piece of work.

  12. D’you know, when we lived in France and used to queue every morning at the baker’s for fresh bread, the gossip would invariably be about … the weather. The longer we lived there, the more we realised it’s simply a calumny to suggest that Brits are the only ones to obsess about it. Great list of books! I got rather stuck. I’m not sure whether I’ll play.

    1. So glad to hear that we share one thing in common with our neighbours across the water!

      1. Oh, lots of things I think!

    2. Australians are equally obsessed. I actually think it’s universal, rather than peculiarly British.

      1. Maybe it’s a habit that we have exported???

  13. My immediate thought was Cheerful Weather for the Wedding, by Julia Strachey (Persephone Books). A fun list — thanks!

    1. I don’t know that one sorry. A good title though!

  14. Oh, this looks like fun, I might give it a try myself if I have time.
    If I do, I’ll start off with Angela’s Ashes which has to be one of the wettest books I’ve ever read. It rained inside and outside their sad household!

    1. Ah well it wouldn’t be Ireland if there wasn’t rain

      1. There’s a reason for all that green grass…

    1. Thanks Rosie, it was good fun putting it together

  15. Great list! (I immediately thought of Jenny Offill’s Weather and Rosamond Lehmann’s The Weather in the Streets…)

    1. I’ve heard of Weather but not the Lehmann. Off to look that one up on Goodreads

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