by James M. Tubor. James M. Tubor chronicles the search for the world’s deepest cave, as lead by two teams – one American (in Mexico), one Ukrainian (in Georgia) – between 1991 to 2009. He describes the characters involved, and the … Continue reading
Category Archives: Sport

21st May 2017
by Leigh Forbes
Comments Off on Denali’s Howl: The Deadliest Climbing Disaster on America’s Wildest Peak
Denali’s Howl: The Deadliest Climbing Disaster on America’s Wildest Peak
by Andy Hall. A well-researched and well-written account of the 1967 disaster on Alaska’s Denali, the highest mountain in North America, drawn from contemporary records and reports from, as well as modern-day interviews with those involved. In the summer of … Continue reading
Climbs and Punishment
by Felix Lowe. Felix Lowe humblebrags his way from Barcelona to Rome by bike, shadowing the route of Hannibal’s advance in 218 BC for much of the way. Lowe details the countryside, the history, and the food, and talks a … Continue reading

18th November 2016
by Leigh Forbes
Comments Off on Deep: Freediving, Renegade Science and What the Ocean Tells Us About Ourselves
Deep: Freediving, Renegade Science and What the Ocean Tells Us About Ourselves
by James Nestor. James Nestor pulls us into the forbidding world of freediving – an activity during which participants plunge (sometimes hundreds of feet) underwater without any kind of breathing apparatus – and right to the edge of human survival. Nestor … Continue reading
Moonwalker: Adventures of a Midnight Mountaineer
by Alan Rowan. I was always going to like this book – 238 pages about night-hiking in the Scottish mountains. This book chronicles the author’s round of the Munros, the 287 Scottish mountains higher than 3,000′. As such it could have … Continue reading

27th April 2016
by Leigh Forbes
Comments Off on Feet in the Clouds: a Tale of Fell-Running and Obsession
Feet in the Clouds: a Tale of Fell-Running and Obsession
by Richard Askwith. Richard Askwith introduces us to not only fell running, but also fell runners, fell races and long-distance challenges, and the remarkable story of fell-running history – all interwoven with details of the contemporary fell-running year as it … Continue reading
Messengers: City Tales from a Bicycle Courier
by Julian Sayarer. Julian Sayarer, Emre, is an angry young man, with a rant at the Establishment of truly Floydian proportions. And he writes it beautifully, with some of the most evocative prose I have ever read. It made me … Continue reading

12th April 2016
by Leigh Forbes
Comments Off on Land of Second Chances: the Impossible Rise of Rwanda’s Cycling Team
Land of Second Chances: the Impossible Rise of Rwanda’s Cycling Team
by Tim Lewis. Land of Second Chances weaves a wonderful path between cycling and Rwanda, managing to concentrate on both and show how intertwined they are. Although there is inevitably some detail about the genocide, there is much more about … Continue reading