One breath Freediving, death, and the quest to shatter human limits

Adam Skolnick

Book - 2016

"One Breath is a gripping and powerful exploration of the strange and fascinating sport of freediving, and of the tragic, untimely death of America's greatest freediver,"--Amazon.com.

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Subjects
Published
New York : Crown Archetype [2016]
Language
English
Main Author
Adam Skolnick (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
324 pages, 8 unnumbered pages of plates : color illustrations ; 24 cm
ISBN
9780553447484
  • 1. Dean's Blue Hole, Long Island, Bahamas, November 17, 2013
  • 2. Water Child
  • 3. What is Freediving?
  • 4. Punk-Ass Vegans
  • 5. Caribbean Cup 2014, Roatan, Honduras
  • 6. Revolution
  • 7. Caribbean Cup 2014, Roatan, Honduras
  • 8. Brooklyn Rising
  • 9. Caribbean Cup 2014, Roatan, Honduras
  • 10. Dive Yourself Free
  • 11. Deja Blue
  • 12. Dive Bum Chronicles
  • 13. Sardinia, Italy: 2014 Aida Team World Championship
  • 14. Kerry Hollowell Investigates
  • 15. One-Hundred-Meter Man
  • 16. Bloody Water
  • 17. Nick's Last Days
  • 18. Nick Mevoli's Last Dive
  • 19. Vertical Blue 2014, Long Island, Bahamas
  • Epilogue
  • Acknowledgments
  • Index
Review by Library Journal Review

Freediving, or diving to tremendous depths without oxygen, is a fringe sport that attracts those looking for a disruption from everyday life and a unique challenge of body and mind; though also with the income to travel to far-flung locales to indulge. Focusing on Nick Mevoli, the first freediver to die in competition, Skolnick delves into a sport that seems to glorify lung squeezes, or pulmonary edema, which includes spitting blood or pink, foaming froth as well as deep-water and surface blackouts. Introduced to diving on an annual trip to catch lobsters, Mevoli is forever drawn to the bliss of the deep water. After a rough and semi-neglected childhood, straightedge high school years, and living as a squatter and activist in early adulthood, Mevoli finally settles in New York, where he trains at area pools in between frequent trips to competitions and open water training. In an attempt to create a portrayal that stays true to his ideals as a youth, certain parts of Mevoli's character and life are highlighted, while other contrasting aspects are mentioned only in passing. VERDICT Best suited for freedivers, others drawn to deep water, and those seeking to gain an understanding of what drives athletes to unconventional pursuits.- Zebulin Evelhoch, Central Washington Univ. Lib. © Copyright 2015. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A fatality spurs an inquiry into an extreme sport, illuminating the risksas well as the rewardsof free diving. After writing a couple dozen guidebooks for the Lonely Planet series, Skolnick shows sharp reportorial instincts in this multilayered narrative beginning with the 2013 tragedy of Nicholas Mevoli, "the first athlete to die in an international freediving competition." The obscure sport tests the limits of its athletes, who dive as deep as 100 meters or more, holding their breath for some four minutes, risking blackouts from the pressure or worse. "Their feats dazzled because with each dive they were risking their lives," the author writes of one such competition. "No one knew where that unknown limit was." Interspersed with an examination of the sport of free divingloosely organized, self-governed, with most of the athletes spending considerable sums without sponsorshipis the story of an athlete considered remarkable well before his death and who lived his life with an uncompromising puritythough he always attracted romantic attention, he committed to celibacy for as long as four yearsand who made it his priority "to live, not merely exist." Parallel tracks show Mevoli's life as he pushed himself toward an early death that quite possibly could have been prevented and the development of the sport as it gained the perspective of mortality that his death underscored. "Nick's was the first fatality in more than 35,000 dives," writes Skolnick. "Afterward, they were forced to admit that nobody could say for sure how repeated depths impacted the body.This wasn't a matter of conflicting science; research was almost nonexistent." This is a page-turning book about how and why Mevoli died (with a suggestion that a doctor shouldn't have cleared him to dive), but it's also about the competitors drawn to the sport, the ones for whom "freediving is both an athletic quest to push the limits of the body and mind, and a spiritual experience." A worthy addition to the growing body of literature on adventures that test the limits of nature and mankind. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.