It could also be titled, The Philosophy of Good Diving by Steve Lewis. Neither condescending nor pontificating in his style he instead uses his wit to inject a humorous flavour which makes it always an engaging read. I found it hard to put down. I was delighted to see that his writing style paralleled a personal hero of mine, the late physicist Richard Feynman. Feynman had the ability to use his own philosophy of things physical to tease out the points and processes that really mattered and morph them into an enthusiastic presentation understandable by the neophyte or lay individual. Steve Lewis has done the same with things diving in this book.
This book is clearly directed at those who are or who intend to be technical divers but I think it should be a volume that any experienced diver should read and keep handy for reference. Even though I already want to improve my own skills and pursue diving safety to a higher degree I find myself further motivated by this book to attain a higher degree of fitness, learn how to really breathe, master trim and positioning and to throw away erroneous terms such as negative or positive buoyancy. Some readers may even develop an appreciation for the SI system of measurement.
Although it is sprinkled with a few spelling errors they take very little away from the book and in one case some unintentional humour gets injected. I found out for instance that a favourite aging aunt of his may fuel her great wit with liberal doses of Vitamin C. Read the book to find out what I am alluding to here but mainly buy and read the book to see what a great treatise on diving it really is.
This book is clearly directed at those who are or who intend to be technical divers but I think it should be a volume that any experienced diver should read and keep handy for reference. Even though I already want to improve my own skills and pursue diving safety to a higher degree I find myself further motivated by this book to attain a higher degree of fitness, learn how to really breathe, master trim and positioning and to throw away erroneous terms such as negative or positive buoyancy. Some readers may even develop an appreciation for the SI system of measurement.
Although it is sprinkled with a few spelling errors they take very little away from the book and in one case some unintentional humour gets injected. I found out for instance that a favourite aging aunt of his may fuel her great wit with liberal doses of Vitamin C. Read the book to find out what I am alluding to here but mainly buy and read the book to see what a great treatise on diving it really is.