Fire, earth, sky, water. A crop of new spring titles have the elements for some informative reading, from putting readers at ground zero below supercells to challenging their survival instincts:
Camille Seaman, Princeton Architectural Press, 176 pp., $40
Equal parts terrifying and beautiful, gathering storm clouds force the reader to stop, look — and breathe — in a new book by photographer Camille Seaman. She caught a glimpse of her daughter watching "Storm Chasers" on television — and it was over. It's easy to imagine you are the one alone on the roads in June in Minnesota and across the Plains states, supercells swirling, contorting and swallowing the sky, a witness to nature's force. Seaman puts the reader squarely in her shoes. Some photos bear no description other than a timestamp of their month, year and state. With others, Seaman is spare with her words, describing the storm's structure or impact. Still, words never get in the way, allowing her photos to gather power, page to page.
Excerpt: "I wasn't prepared for just how overwhelming an experience chasing can be. It is visceral and multisensory: the smell of charged particles, the sweetness of grass, the scent of pavement just before it rains, the sight of wind blowing through cornfields. Not to mention the color of the clouds and the light of the sky and the lightning. It's all so beautiful, so awesome, and so humbling at the same time."

Daniel Hume, The Experiment, 192 pp., $19.95
Author Daniel Hume was fascinated by fire — making sparks, producing flame — during his youth in the English countryside. He tried his own versions of a bow drill, rubbing his hands raw, until, finally, he produced an ember. Adding some tinder from the bed of his Lionhead rabbit, he had success. "Finally, I had lit a fire — not only on the ground, but deep inside myself." Now a bushcraft expert who leads an outdoor survival school in the United Kingdom, Hume takes readers step by step through fire-making (hand drills, striking flint and steel, fire plows, sun power!), and offers pointers on the volume of tinder around us. (Note to self: Bring a piece of old inner tube on a rainy camping weekend.) Hume is more of a friendly ranger in delivery than drill sergeant, and only too happy to fire-worship.