


Since the release of the movie, the phrase has grown to mean any event where a situation is aggravated drastically by an exceptionally rare combination of circumstances. Its adoption was accelerated with the release of the 2000 feature film adaptation of Junger's book. Junger published his book The Perfect Storm in 1997 and its success brought the phrase into popular culture. tropical moisture provided by tropical storm (or hurricane)įrom that, Junger keyed on Case's use of the word perfect and coined the phrase perfect storm, choosing to use The Perfect Storm as the title of his book.a flow of cool and dry air generated by a high-pressure from another direction.warm air from a low-pressure system coming from one direction.Case described to Junger the confluence of three different weather-related phenomena that combined to create what Case referred to as the "perfect situation" to generate such a storm: In the course of his research, he spoke with Bob Case, who had been a deputy meteorologist in the Boston office of the National Weather Service at the time of the storm. Technically, this storm was an extratropical cyclone. In 1993, journalist and author Sebastian Junger planned to write a book about the 1991 Halloween Nor'easter storm. Seven factors were involved in the chain of circumstances that led to the flood." The next recorded instance is in the March 20, 1936, issue of the Port Arthur News in Texas: "The weather bureau describes the disturbance as 'the perfect storm' of its type. This record is kept by the UK Meteorological Office.

Lloyd of Withington (Manchester, England) describes ″A perfect storm of thunder and lightning all over England (except London) doing fearful and fatal damage″ when recording monthly rainfall measurements for that year. The first known use of the expression in the meteorological sense is on May 30, 1850, when the Rev. I have heard a brother of the story-telling trade at Naples preaching to a pack of good-for-nothing honest, lazy fellows by the sea-shore, work himself up into such a rage and passion with some of the villains whose wicked deeds he was describing and inventing, that the audience could not resist it and they and the poet together would burst out into a roar of oaths and execrations against the fictitious monster of the tale, so that the hat went round, and the bajocchi tumbled into it, in the midst of a perfect storm of sympathy. The phrase appears in William Makepeace Thackeray's novel Vanity Fair: The Oxford English Dictionary has published references going back to 1718 for "perfect storm", though the earliest citations use the phrase in the sense of "absolute" or "complete", or for emphasis, as in "a perfect stranger".
