Leading archaeologist and consummate storyteller James Delgado takes readers on a rollicking deep-sea dive into his highly unusual life's locating and exploring the world's most famous shipwrecks. Colorful characters, near misses, and the thrill of standing - or floating - in history's footprints make for a highly entertaining look at the fascinating history and glittering bounty beneath the waves. Included are accounts of Pearl Harbor, the Titanic, and Bikini Atoll, site of the world's first nuclear tests.
Adventures of a Sea Hunter is a decent book. It is really more of a shipwreck sampler than an in depth study of historical wrecks, but this format worked just fine for me, as it allowed me to refresh my memory regarding wrecks that I am familiar with, and whetted my curiosity of wrecks that are new to me. The book appears to center a great deal on wrecks explored on The Sea Hunters TV series that aired several years ago, and at points in the book I found those references to the TV show to be distracting. I'd have just preferred to read about these wrecks without reference to a TV show that James Delgado was affiliated with at the time he wrote the book.
Delgado's descriptions of diving some of the wrecks featured in this book were just lovely. His description of the dive he did on the U.S.S. Arizona was haunting and moving, and his description of the wrecks in the Bikini Atoll was fascinating to me (I am also a sucker for the early days of the American nuclear program, so shipwrecks *and* nukes are just the cat's pajamas for me). I found other chapters to be quite interesting as well (e.g., the chapter on the Carpathia and the chapter on Kublai Khan's lost fleet), but I do think that the first half of the book was far more appealing to me than the second half, for some reason.
Although Adventures of a Sea Hunter was interesting, the copy editing of this book left a lot to be desired. The book was riddled with typos, grammatical errors, awkward sentences, and sentence fragments. My own writing has lost a lot of its sparkle since I graduated from college, and frankly, I'd have *never* been employed as a copy editor at any point in my life, so I really am not someone who should criticize this aspect of any work. That said, however, these types of errors were plentiful and obvious in this work, and it would not be fair to fail to note that. I was able to read around these errors and still enjoy the book, but readers who are distracted by errors in writing will have a lot to be frustrated by with this book.
Some great descriptions of clear and silty water dives, in warm, cold and, in some cases, downright dangerous conditions, these wreck stories and nicely interspersed with historical research and backstories of the crew and vessels.
Having said that, my favorite was of a wreck that was completely open to view by everyone at low tide, but was not recognized for its historical significance until a change encounter by the author.
One glitch on the Kindle version I read was that numbers came up as the letter 'n' so I had to use the little grey cells in some cases to get the full picture. But this is about adventure and exploration - and shipwrecks fit the bill every time.
Some guys really get to walk through history. And in this book Delgado, who is a director of an institute in DC shares a lot of his favorite dives and adventures. Some of them not even dives at all. Excavating a ship that was present for the San Francisco fire in 1806. Diving inside a mountain where the Nazis built and launched V-2 rockets. Going to the Titanic. Diving in Pearl Harbor with battleships. He shares nuggets from these adventures and you can tell they have been epic. Fascinating walk through history...
“You don’t know till you go” is tried and true wisdom in the difficult task of shipwreck identification.” ~ James Delgado takes us under the sea in a collection of captivating tales of his dives on various sunken ships. He provides a brief history of these lost vessels, bringing them back from the depths and into the minds of the readers to share their stories so they may live on. Delgado also describes his dives and the feelings of seeing the sunken crafts, sometimes for the first time since they were lost. An informative, yet easier read, to bring some insight into the history of sunken ships.
An interesting survey of a number of historical wrecks the author has dived on. He leads off with the history surrounding the wreck, then proceeds to describe his diving and discoveries. As you go from one wreck to another, interesting, and little known tid bits of history are uncovered. Being a history lover, I loved the book.