His books include The Invention of Clouds: How an Amateur Meteorologist Forged the Language of the Skies (2001), an account of the life and work of Luke Howard which won a 2001 Los Angeles TimesBook Prize[3] and was shortlisted for the 2002 Samuel Johnson Prize;[4][5]Terra: Tales of the Earth (2009), a study of natural disasters, a BBC Wales Science Book of the Year;[6] and an anthology of science writing, The Art of Science: a Natural History of Ideas (2011).[7] He has also written four illustrated books on weather in association with the UK Met Office, including The Cloud Book (2008); Extraordinary Clouds (2009); and Extraordinary Weather (2012), and edited Daniel Defoe's first book, The Storm (1704) for Penguin Classics(2005).Works written in collaboration with the British landscape photographer Jem Southam include Clouds Descending (2009) and The River in Winter (2012).
In the academic year 2008–09 Hamblyn was writer-in-residence at the University College London Environment Institute, and produced the book Data Soliloquies (Slade, 2009) with Martin John Callanan who was artist-in-residence for the same year.[8]
Publications
Books by Richard Hamblyn
The Invention of Clouds: How an Amateur Meteorologist Forged the Language of the Skies (Picador, 2001 ISBN978-0330391955).[5]
The Cloud Book: How to Understand the Skies (D&C/Met Office, 2008; revised and updated edition 2021 ISBN978-14463-08905)
The Sea: Nature and Culture (Reaktion, 2021)
Other publications by Richard Hamblyn
"The British Audiences for Volcanoes", in Transports: Travel, Pleasure and Imaginative Geography 1600–1830, ed. Chlöe Chard and Helen Langdon (Yale University Press, 1996)
Literature & Science, 1660–1834, vol 3: 'Earthly Powers', ed. (Pickering & Chatto, 2003: one of an 8-volume series of edited anthologies of science-themed writing from the long eighteenth century