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A
Tale of Obsession in the World's Longest Cave James
D. Borden and Roger W. Brucker
November 2000 ISBN 0-8093-2345-1 | cloth | $59.95s ISBN 0-8093-2436-X | paper | $30.00t 416 pages | 6 x 9 42 line drawings, 24 maps, 5 b&w photos, 20 color illustrations Regional, Caving, General Interest
“Beyond Mammoth Cave will appeal to both cave explorers and armchair explorers. . . . It is a story that draws one in and is an honest look at real exploration by ordinary people who have ordinary faults but become obsessive and legitimate explorers. The conflicts are real and add a credible and cohesive level of detail to the description of the events.”—Emily Davis Mobley, coeditor of A Guide to Speleological Literature of the English Language: 1794-1996
“[T]his
book tells the whole truth .
. . of the political intrigue and rivalry between the Cave Research
Foundation (CRF) and the Central Kentucky Karst Coalition (CKKC) as they
each make discoveries and hide secrets in the race to connect Mammoth Cave
with Roppel Cave. With books like this there will never be a shortage of
cavers.”—National
Speleological Society News
In Beyond Mammoth Cave: A Tale of Obsession in the World’s Longest Cave, James D. Borden and Roger W. Brucker provide gripping first-person accounts of the discoveries, including Roppel Cave, that made Kentucky’s Mammoth Cave three times longer than any other cave in the world.
Borden,
a relative newcomer, and Brucker, a veteran explorer, bring a personal and
sometimes conflicting view of their roles as adversaries in a race that
lasted from 1972 through 1983 to find “big cave.” They describe
hazardous adventures, precarious climbs, and close calls from falling
rocks. The perils are many and the trek arduous as they squirm through
muddy tubes, wade in neck-deep cold water, and crawl over sharp rocks and
gritty sand. Theirs is a tale of agonizing endurance spiced by spectacular
discoveries.
But
the cave was not the sole obstacle. The explorations were complicated by
political intrigue and the rivalry between the Kentucky-based Cave
Research Foundation and the Central Kentucky Karst Coalition, each seeking
to make discoveries and hide secrets. Extreme stress, of course, evoked
extreme behavior, ranging from selfishness to sacrifice, from outrageous
humor to the deadly serious response.
Beyond
Mammoth Cave
includes maps by Patricia Kambesis that show the
progression of cave discoveries in relation to the topography. Original
line drawings by well-known illustrator Linda Heslop capture the dark
mystery of the exploration. The book features five black and white
photographs as a color gallery of photographs.
A
sequel to The Longest Cave by Brucker and Richard A. Watson, this book is a
comprehensive update of the speleological investigations in the Mammoth
Cave region. Brucker’s involvement provides continuity to the
investigation.
James
D. BordenJames D. Borden is a data storage manager at Vencor, Inc. Louisville,
Kentucky. He is a Fellow of the National Speleological Society, a past
director of the Cave Research Foundation, and managing director of the
Central Kentucky Karst Coalition. Roger
W. Brucker, retired Dayton, Ohio, advertising executive, fellow of the
National Speleological Society, and past president of the Cave Research
Foundation, is coauthor of three books: The
Caves Beyond (with Joe Lawrence Jr.), Trapped!
The Story of the Floyd Collins (with Robert K. Murray),
and The Longest Cave (with
Richard A. Watson), also available from Southern Illinois University
Press. |
Paper Cloth
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