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Diving into Darkness: A True Story of Death and Survival

Diving into Darkness: A True Story of Death and Survival
By Phillip Finch

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On New Year's Day, 2005, David Shaw traveled halfway around the world on a journey that took him to a steep crater in the Kalahari Desert of South Africa, a site known as Bushman's Hole. His destination was nearly 900 feet below the surface.
On January 8th he descended into the water. About fifteen feet below the surface was a fissure in the bottom of the basin, barely wide enough to admit him. He slipped through the opening and disappeared from sight, leaving behind the world of light and life.
Then, a second diver descended through the same crack in the stone. This was Don Shirley, Shaw's friend, and one of the few people in the world qualified to follow where Shaw was about to go. In the community of extreme diving, Don Shirley was a master among masters.
Twenty-five minutes later, one of the men was dead. The other was in mortal peril, and would spend the next 10 hours struggling to survive, existing literally from breath to breath.
What happened that day is the stuff of nightmarish drama, but it’s also a compelling human story of friendship, heroism, ambition, and of coming to terms with loss and tragedy.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #530222 in Books
  • Published on: 2008-09-30
  • Released on: 2008-09-30
  • Format: Bargain Price
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 320 pages

Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly
Starred Review. In this gripping account, Finch (F2F) narrates a disastrous attempt to recover a body nearly 900 feet underwater in a South African crater named Bushman's Hole. David Shaw, an Australian pilot for Cathay Pacific, became obsessed with diving in his early 40s and quickly became a world-class deep diver. In South Africa, Shaw trained with renowned diving instructor Don Shirley, and the two men grew close. Shirley was a proponent of diving rebreathers, sophisticated pieces of equipment that allow divers to reach greater depths while using less equipment. In 2004, Shaw dove to the bottom of Bushman's Hole, where he discovered the corpse of a diver that had lain there for a decade. Together, Shaw and Shirley decided to try to raise the body. Finch seamlessly weaves together the various strands of his story, from the character biographies to the dangers and arcane technologies of deep diving. An experienced cave diver himself, Finch brings the reader into a strange and hermetic underworld that few have ever experienced firsthand. In deep diving, he demonstrates, even the smallest breakdown in judgment or equipment will bring catastrophe. Although the outcome is never in doubt, Finch manages to build suspense to fevered intensity. (Oct.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist
In January 2005, extreme diver David Shaw entered Bushman’s Hole, a watery crater in the Kalahari Desert. Easing himself through a narrow fissure, he aimed himself at the bottom of the crater, roughly 900 feet below him. Soon after, his diving partner, Don Shirley, followed Shaw down. In less than an hour, one of the men was dead, and the other faced a harrowing 10-hour decompression, during which he scrambled for every breath. This is a dramatic and emotional story, vividly told by journalist and diver Finch (who really makes us feel what it must have been like, spending 10 hours wondering if he would run out of air before he made it to safety). The author explores not just the episode he’s writing about, but also the sport of diving: its factions, its superstars, its history. A solid addition to the sport-diving genre. --David Pitt

Review

“[A] gripping account . . . Finch brings the reader into a strange and hermetic underworld that few have ever experienced firsthand. . . . Although the outcome is never in doubt, Finch manages to build suspense to fevered intensity.” —Publishers Weekly (starred review)

 

“A nail-biter with natural appeal.” —Kirkus Reviews


“An incredible story about transcending the limits of human endurance.” —The Observer (UK)

“Phillip Finch’s wonderfully crafted account . . . combines the pace of a thriller with a finely tuned sensitivity toward the emotions of all those involved.” —The Independent (UK)

 


Customer Reviews

The spellbinding story and background of a tragic deep-diving body recovery attempt5
Diving into Darkness is the story behind the fatal body recovery attempt conducted by the Australian diver David Shaw at Boesmansgat, or Bushman's Hole, in South Africa in January of 2005. This is a thriller, but one where we know the ending. David Shaw died at the almost incredible depth of around 900 feet while trying to recover the body of Deion Dreyer, a young diver who had perished in the massive sinkhole a decade earlier. The mission, which Shaw attempted with Don Shirley as his primary support diver, is well documented and you can see the video Shaw took during his last dive on YouTube.

Author Phillip Finch neither knew Shaw nor was he part of the well-publicized expedition, but the Kansas-based journalist, who is a cave diver himself, managed to create a spell-binding, riveting account of how David's Shaw's passion for extreme diving led to an almost inevitable conclusion.

Unlike most in the small community of extreme divers, David Shaw did not have thousands of dives and decades of experience under his belt when he attempted the complex recovery at near record depth. He was a commercial pilot with Cathay Pacific Airlines who had started in crop duster and charter planes and then worked his way up to ever more complex machinery. It wasn't until 1999, at age 45, that Shaw took up scuba, but once he did, he progressed to Nitrox, decompression dives, wreck diving, cave diving, trimix and rebreather certifications at near record speed.

Rebreather training got him in contact with Don Shirley, an widely renowned instructor and "rebreather evangelist" in South Africa. The book examines the relationship between the laid back and easy going Shirley and the goal-oriented, methodical and driven Shaw whose experience as an airliner captain allowed him to efficiently absorb vast amounts of technical knowledge and calmly follow complex procedures under the most trying circumstances.

Finch relates Shaw's rapid progression from novice diver to descending to the bottom of Boesmansgat, a sinkhole whose bottom at 900+ feet had caused problems to such diving legends as Sheck Exley and Nuno Gomes. Both had survived their own attempts, but not without problems. And none had gone as deep as David Shaw on a rebreather, a complex and at times finicky apparatus that recycles breathing gasses with the help of sensors, computers, and chemistry. When he finds the body of Deion Dreyer, he attempts a recovery on the spot, but the body is stuck and Shaw decides to return for it on another dive.

The book introduces Shaw's wife of 30 years who accepts her husband's dangerous passions but is not part of it. We also get to know friends and fellow divers, and the parents of the dead diver whose body Shaw wants to recover in what ends up becoming a well publicized media event. Don Shirley takes an increasingly important role and finally a central one when he gets in near fatal trouble himself while working his way up from the depths of the massive sinkhole.

The risks Shaw engaged in were considerable. "A career of 333 dives from the deep end of a swimming pool to an attempted body recovery at the bottom of Bushman's Hole is an arc of almost unimaginable steepness," observes Finch. Yet Shaw clearly knew what he was doing, and Finch chronicles Shaw's path as a methodical, deliberate and eminently competent advance rather than daredevil imprudence.

Finch also relates the somber aftermath in heart-wrenching detail -- Shaw's wife's despair and depression, Don Shirley's slow recovery from a debilitating case of the bends, and finally Shirley's advice to noice divers and the eulogy of David Shaw's daughter, Lisa.

Diving into Darkness is a beautifully crafted book, thrilling to read, and written in an engaging style and pace. -- C. H. Blickenstorfer, [...]

dangerous deep diving4
In January 2005, David Shaw attempted to recover from the floor of Bushmansgat, or Bushman's Hole, the body of a diver who had died there in December 1994. The depth was 270 meters, 886 feet. Sheck Exley had reached a higher point on the bottom of this cave in South Africa in 1993 at -263 meters, the first person to do so. He suffered greatly from HPNS during the deeper part of that dive. Shaw died in the recovery attempt, and his deepest support diver, Don Shirley, suffered a rebreather control-system failure and a serious inner-ear-bends event. All this was heavily publicized at the time, and most cave-divers are probably vaguely aware of it.

This thoroughly researched book covers the dive in detail, as well as topics like previous diving in Bushmansgat and Shaw's and Shirley's prior diving careers. It is non-technical, written for a popular audience, and there are brief but clear explanations about things like the need for trimix and the hazards of decompression sickness during such dives. The text is well crafted, if not particularly wonderful, and reads smoothly. The book is not nearly as long as the number of pages implies, because the type is large and widely spaced within generous margins. There are a good index and a few appendixes, including a eulogy by Shaw's daughter Lisa. --Bill Mixon

Unputdownable!5
First off, I am John Cameron's wife, not John Cameron. And I am not a cave diver, not even much of a swimmer. But I was drawn to this book because I am deeply interested in people who do extreme things for no good reason. (I like to read about mountain climbers too). Diving into Darkness was a cracking good read! I am in awe of the author's skill - we know from the jacket that this dive is not going to go well, but we don't know which of the two men will not survive. And we keep reading through the technical details, well explained, and loads of back story so that by the time we return to the fateful day, we care, we want to know what happened and how it happened. After reading this book, I have a better idea why cave divers do what they do. I learned they are not thrill seekers, on the contrary. The charge they get is that total concentration, the buzz from living in the moment. And as a keen yoga student, I do understand that. Highly recommended.