The Plunge
Maverick Swimmers, An Unlikely Quest, and The Transformative Power of Cold Water
-
- Vorbestellbar
-
- Erwartet am 30. Juli 2026
-
- 14,99 €
Beschreibung des Verlags
A globe-spanning narrative adventure about how the euphoria of cold water can transform — and even extend — your life.
Lifelong athlete and Sports Illustrated writer Chris Ballard worried his days of exercise were numbered. Then he received a fateful text message about a trend taking hold around the world: submerging in freezing cold water.
It wasn’t only thrill seekers or wellness gurus extolling its power. Swimmers have long known that when paired with cold, their sport delivers extraordinary rewards; now, modern research has shown that just a few minutes in cold water can deliver remarkable benefits: heightened energy and focus, reduced inflammation, and relief from depression and anxiety.
In The Plunge, Ballard travels to laboratories and swims in waters around the world, from Portsmouth to the Pacific, tracing the roots of cold water swimming in ancient practices largely lost in the modern world.
He immerses himself in the growing tribe of cold-water junkies of all ages, shapes and nationalities, from pioneers like Lynne Cox to visionaries like Ram Barkai, whose audacious dream of getting ice swimming into the Olympics edges closer to reality.
And, from cold plunging to open water swimming to ice swimming, he tests his limits in this extreme sport, eventually becoming a US national champion, his body and mind transformed along the way.
Blending history, cutting-edge science, colourful characters, and propulsive narrative storytelling, it’s a rollicking, eye-opening adventure that reveals how a single act — stepping into cold water — can unlock resilience, connection, meaning and joy.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Sports writer Ballard (One Shot at Forever) traverses the globe for this thrilling exploration of cold water swimming. Ballard came to the sport in 2023, when the "effects of aging and sore joints" spurred him to investigate a pitch about immersion in intensely cold water—"an old modality" that offers benefits ranging from reducing swelling to lowering cortisol, and has spread in recent years thanks to its adoption by NBA players and health podcasters. His research brings him into the orbit of a community of larger-than-life figures, among them Cape Town businessman Ram Barkai, who founded the International Ice Swimming Association in 2009; Keaton Jones, a teenage ice swimmer from Arizona who made it onto the USA swim team at the Paris 2024 Olympics; and Lynne Cox, the first person to swim between the U.S. and the Soviet Union across the Bering Straight. Ballard also narrates his quest to compete in IISA's annual Ice Mile, and intriguingly speculates on the causes of the activity's recent popularity (much of modern life is "built around easy"; pursuing a task like submerging oneself in icy water produces a kind of positive stress that helps people feel "tougher, more capable"). The result is a high-spirited take on the unexpected rise of a frigid and fascinating sport.