rstofer
Contributor
You could also consider "Deco For Divers" by Mark Powell
Richard
Richard
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NOAA manual and Dennis Graver's Scuba Diving 3rd edition. For a new diver those are tough to beat. I'd also recommend the US NAVY dive manual which you can download for FREE! yes FREE dop not pay those idiots on ebay for a CD which may not even be the current release.
A book? What's that?
You might enjoy reading some of the training material for future dive courses you plan to do after OW - eg AOW, Intro to Nitrox, Advanced Nitrox & Decompression Procedures (if you think you may go in those directions in the future). Personally I prefer the TDI manuals/courses over the PADI equivalents
If you choose this route, I would suggest reading them in the above order
For non course-related deep diving books, I would recommend Shadow Divers or any of Sheck Exley's books if you 1. are interested in deep diving and 2. won't get put off by reading about people dying/nearly dying while diving
However, for a historical prospective, "The New Science Of Skin And Scuba Diving" 1969 edition is a fun read. First, it discusses how it used to be done. More important, you can see how little has changed in 40 years. In fact, there are some techniques in the book that I don't believe are taught today - and should be.
Try Alibris: Used Books, Used Textbooks, Rare & Out-of-Print Books - that's where I get all of my used books.
Richard