Most Helpful Customer Reviews
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Beautifully designed and illustrated guide to diving, October 1, 2006
Eyewitness Companions: Scuba Diving is one in a whole series of "Eyewitness" books, each of which describes all aspects of a hobby or passion. I initially hesitated buying it because it is fairly expensive and seemed to cover the same scuba diving basics -- equipment, physics, physiology, navigating, marine life, different types of diving, photography and video, places to go and so on -- as various other scuba intro books. Yet, I found myself picking it up again and again in the bookstore because it is different from any other diving book. And eventually I bought it.
What sets Eyewitness Companions: Scuba Diving apart is its presentation. For starters, it's sort of a hybrid between hardcover and paperback with some genuine innovations. For example, the front and back covers have three inch flaps that double as a quick and handy table of contents and also as a built-in bookmark. Very clever. The second big difference compared to many other diving books -- many of which are a bit bare-bones -- is the gorgeous layout and design. Here, again, Eyewitness is a hybrid, one between a book and a magazine. Virtually every two page spread has at least three superb photographs, illustrating and explaining the topic at hand. And photos are not just printed as plain rectangles in a box. No, they are pathed, they fade in and out, the are combined, overlayed and neatly labeled and described. Typography and organization are first rate, all geared towards providing information clearly and concisely, but also in an interesting, appealing way.
As a result, while the narrative and explanations are simple and straightforward, you simply get more in this book. Instead of a brief chapter on a topic, you get a thoughtfully subdivided and excellently edited version that describes all aspects, has beautiful photos, several illustrations, how-tos, equipment close-ups, and often sidebars, graphs and charts. The section on freediving, for example, not only describes the sport and shows excellent pictures, it also has a clever graph that illustrates diving depths as they relate to the Statue of Liberty and Big Ben. All of it is professional quality. Yet, whereas magazines are often all style and little substance, Eyewitness Comnpanions: Scuba Diving skillfully uses all those visuals to merge information and illustrations into a polished, informative publication that's as close to multimedia as a printed book can get.
Travelers will enjoy the over 60 description of popular dive locations, sorted by continent. Each, of course, with pictures, statistics, and relevant information. Sections on underwater life are equally interesting, with great pictures and many interesting facts and tidbits.
This is a unique book that is really much more than the sum of its parts. It's an excellent example how an almost magazine-style approach to book design can result in something that is both informative and a real pleasure to read.
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Give this book as a present to a SCUBA diver or a diver-to-be!, October 8, 2006
There are many books on SCUBA diving. And there are many books on a variety of topics published by DK. There is only a single book on SCUBA diving published by DK! Diving makes a superb topic for a publishing company like DK, with the high-quality color photos, the mix of photos, diagrams, and texts, and the use of no-nonsense models to feature equipment and techniques.
This book focused on the history of diving, diving fundamentals, diving physiology, equipment, techniques, natural history, and diving sites. It did all these things pretty well. There was great detail in some things, like how wet suits work to keep you warm, and less in others, such as specifics of great dive sites of the world.
I did enjoy this book. My favorite dive sites were not featured but I didn't feel slighted. I did want more details of the featured sites, such as California's kelp forests off Monterey. I guess I'll look elsewhere for some information to help plan this particular dive. Another omission that I thought this book really needed was a copy of dive tables and instructions on how to use them. Why wasn't this fundamental and important issue discussed? Liability? Potential revisions of future dive tables?
Finally, I noticed that there was a reference that sea turtles withdraw their flippers into their shells if threatened. Not for sea turtles! Extra shell is just extra weight and drag for swimming sea turtles, and natural selection has encouraged a modification of the strategy common in land turtles. Also, those bigger sea turtle muscles really fill up the space between the carapace and the plastron (upper and lower shell, respectively).
This book is an excellent gift for the new, the novice, and the experienced diver.
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3.0 out of 5 stars
Scuba Diving book, May 12, 2009
Very easy to find the book I was searching for, great service from the book provider. Book was received in a timely manner, so all-in-all, I would be likely to order more books in the future.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
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5.0 out of 5 stars
Excellent Book
Very current, wide range of topics (equipment, techniques, dive sites, marine life, etc.), lots of great color photos, well written, nicely organized, and it's the perfect size...
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Published on April 21, 2007 by K. Carmony
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