An illustrated journey into the world of undersea diving discusses the history of the sport and offers accounts of the author's own adventures around the world.
Plunging off the shores of Florida, Australia, the Western Pacific islands and other coastal locales, BBC world service reporter and producer and certified dive-master Ecott provides a fascinating, albeit uncritical, look at the fast-growing world of undersea diving. Vivid descriptions of what's to be seen show skeptics what they're missing: coral as green as a "fine piece of carved jade," as scarlet as a "humming-bird feather" and as pink as the "petals of a carnation in a buttonhole." Along the way, he recounts the history of the sport, which has grown from a risky enterprise practiced by a brave few to a far more mainstream, increasingly high-tech recreational endeavor. In interviews, the sport's pioneers (crusty individualists, not surprisingly) express some resentment toward Jacques Cousteau; they believe he stole glory due others. Though Ecott at times suggests discomfort with the diving world's competitive ethos, he seems reluctant to criticize it outright or to question the sport's cult of extreme risk-taking. And while mindful of the sport's dangers (in one particularly terrifying incident, Ecott nearly dies in the English Channel), he emphasizes its spiritual appeal: the title refers to a state of equilibrium that scuba divers aspire to a feeling of weightlessness. Agent, Natasha Fairweather of A.P. Watt. (July)Forecast: Ecott's journalistic acumen his pieces have appeared in Esquire, the Economist, National Geographic and elsewhere makes this an above-average look into a microculture. Lifestyle magazine coverage, plus word-of-mouth recommendations or summer-oriented displays, will lead fans and curious readers alike to this title.
Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.
The ocean has long captured the human imagination. Ecott, a prominent journalist and certified divemaster, does the same with this exploration of the sport of diving. Beginning with the history and development of diving equipment, he takes the reader from the early Greek sponge divers to the mid-twentieth century, when technology had finally advanced enough for diving to become recreational. Accounts of military, commercial, and scientific diving are interspersed with narratives of Ecott's own underwater escapades exploring reefs and shipwrecks, swimming with sharks and dolphins, and testing his limits, all of which provide a thoroughly romantic perspective on diving and the mysteries of the ocean. The concepts and science are explained at a depth appropriate for casual readers, and interviews with the pioneers of sport diving are sure to merit the attention of serious divers. Either audience will be stunned (or amused) by tales of early diving competitions and foolhardy attempts to set world records. Ecott's passion is contagious; his readers will find inspiration and new appreciation for the world beneath the sea.
Gavin QuinnCopyright © American Library Association. All rights reservedWhenever I think about my years of scuba diving, the phrase that comes to mind is "variety of experience." This is also the best characterization of Ecott's book. An excellent writer and veteran reporter for BBC World Service, the author runs the gamut of the diving experience: he includes almost poetic descriptions of the mystic experience of weightlessness and being one with the underwater world, a history of diving, a discussion of hyperbaric physics and physiology, travel narratives of exotic diving locales, and an extremely interesting chapter on Florida sponge divers. This broad sweep is both the book's strength and its weakness. With something to appeal to everyone, it lacks an overarching focus. This also makes the book difficult to classify and hence to recommend to a specific audience. However, it is both enjoyable and informative and would be of interest especially to those who are new to scuba diving and looking for wide-ranging information. It would make a good supplementary reading assignment for a beginning scuba class. Recommended for academic, high school, and public libraries where there is interest in scuba diving. Margaret Rioux, MBL/WHOI Lib., Woods Hole, MA
Copyright 2001 Reed Business Information, Inc.