Book description
The deepest cave on earth was a prize that had remained unclaimed
for centuries, long after every other ultimate discovery had been
made. This is the story of the men and women who risked everything to
find it, earning their place in history beside the likes of Peary,
Amundsen, Hillary, and Armstrong. In 2004, two great
scientist-explorers attempted to find the bottom of the world. Bold,
American Bill Stone was committed to the vast Cheve Cave, located in
southern Mexico and deadly even by supercave standards. On the other
side of the globe, legendary Ukrainian explorer Alexander Klimchouk --
Stone's opposite in temperament and style -- had targeted Krubera, a
freezing nightmare of a supercave in the Republic of Georgia. Blind
Descent explores both the brightest and darkest aspects of the
timeless human urge to discover -- to be first. It is also a thrilling
epic about a pursuit that makes even extreme mountaineering and ocean
exploration pale by comparison. These supercavers spent months in
multiple camps almost two vertical miles deep and many more miles from
their caves' exits. They had to contend with thousand-foot drops,
deadly flooded tunnels, raging whitewater rivers, monstrous
waterfalls, mile-long belly crawls, and much more. Perhaps even worse
were the psychological horrors produced by weeks plunged into
absolute, perpetual darkness, beyond all hope of rescue, including a
particularly insidious derangement called 'The Rapture'. Blind Descent
is a testament to human survival and endurance -- and to two
extraordinary men whose relentless pursuit of greatness led them to
heights of triumph and depths of tragedy neither could have imagined.