Hello, All! I've enjoyed this thread, and as a newbie to the board seems like a safe one for my first post.
DOWN TO THE SHIPS IN THE SEA by Harry Grossett. First-person account of experience as a hard-hat diver beginning in 1896. Grossett worked on the salvage of the sub M2 in 1939 and tells stories of WWII-era diving that make modern tech diving pale in comparison.
ANDREA DORIA: DIVE TO AN ERA by Gary Gentile. How come nobody's suggested any of Gentile's many books? In addition to some great u/w pics, GG tells of some harrowing penetrations. A good read.
GOLDFINGER by Keith Jessop & Neil Hanson (who wrote THE CUISTOM OF THE SEA). Utilizing sat divers, Jessop successfully salvaged $100mil in gold from the sunken "Edinburgh" in the Barents Sea.
SOLID BRASS by Bob Wick. Commercial hardhat diver in WA and AK in the 40s, 50s & 60s. Wick tells of many adventures diving on oil rigs & pipelines in zero vis. Little cross-over for scuba enthusiasts but some fascinating stories.
BEYOND THE DEEP by William Stone & Barbara am Ende. The story of a push into Mexico's Huautla cave system combining dry caving techniques with Stone's then-experimental Cis-Lunar Mk-IV rebreather.
There's lots more, and along with wreck research, gear work & tropical vacations, the winter months are a great time to catch up on reading! Thanks to everyone for great posts on this thread & others!
--Steve