|
81 of 99 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A summary and critique of the book and its layout, 18 Jun 1999
By A Customer
Top Dive Sites of the World - ReviewIt is blatantly obvious when you open the front cover that not only are you going to be sucked into this book, you are going to be sucked into a whole other realm. Six strip photographs of divers in azure blue water and magnificent seascapes immediately tell the diving fan that this book was a good purchase. The dive sites featured are split into seven regions - Caribbean sea, Atlantic Ocean, Mediterranean Sea, Red Sea, Indian Ocean, Indo-Pacific and Pacific Ocean and each of these are handled in the same formulaic way. Each region is then broken down into a small list of dive destinations and these are all assigned three or four pages of text and accompanying pictures. A dive destination is given a brief description often comprising some geographical information, some history and a brief run down of what else is of interest in that particular location and surrounds. Then it is into the nitty gritty of a few selected dive sites and what you can expect from them. For quick reference, each resort's title page has a column describing in brief terms the climate, the best time to visit, how to get there, water temperature, visibility, quality of marine life, depth of dives, snorkelling availability and the dive practicalities of the sites featured. Most of the sites are accessible to open water qualified divers but some are necessarily only for those with advanced/specialised diver skills. Wreck dives are also featured. This book is cleverly produced. It is quite clearly a reference book and so the text, whilst well written, really only becomes important when you are interested at looking at a particular destination or region. It is the pictures, on the other hand, that make this book a real joy to browse through. Collected from a number of renowned photographers, they are breathtakingly beautiful. If I had one criticism of this book it is that it simply is not long enough. To cover the Great Barrier Reef in six pages seems to belittle the most awesome natural creation on the face of the earth but you have to draw the line somewhere. It is clear though that this book is definitely targetted at divers and not something to buy if you simply have an interest in the sea and sea life. For the divers among you, if the descriptions of myriads of fish and the shadowy forms of sharks don't have your mouth watering, the pictures will have you checking your bank balance and the availability of flights to Egypt........or Grand Cayman.......or Fiji.
|