The Plunge
Maverick Swimmers, an Unlikely Quest, and the Transformative Power of Cold Water
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- Pre-Order
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- Expected Jun 9, 2026
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- $14.99
Publisher Description
Born to Run meets Why We Swim and Breath in a globe-spanning work of immersive narrative nonfiction that dives into the hidden world of cold water plunging and swimming—and what it reveals about the human body, mind, and need for connection.
"Mesmerizing...I loved this book.” —Adam Grant, #1 New York Times bestselling author
When award-winning Sports Illustrated writer Chris Ballard receives a cryptic text promising to extend his athletic life, he has no idea it will lead him into a parallel athletic universe—one populated by record-breaking grandmothers, obsessive scientists, rogue visionaries chasing Olympic legitimacy, and everyday people willingly plunging into freezing water together, a realm that subverts the idea of what “elite” athletes are supposed to look like. What begins as curiosity becomes a three-year reporting journey across continents, from the saunas of Finland and seas of Ireland to Norway, England, and Boston.
Blending adventure journalism with rigorous research, The Plunge traces humanity’s long relationship with cold water—from the ancient Greeks and Victorian sea bathers to polar plungers and modern laboratories studying stress, resilience, and mental health, a lifeline for those “drowning on dry land.” Reporting from the front lines of emerging science, Ballard explores how brief, voluntary cold exposure can sharpen focus, elevate mood, reduce inflammation, stunt cortisol, and retrain the body’s stress response, creating a rare state of being both calm and alert.
Along the way, Ballard introduces pioneers like legendary distance swimmer Lynne Cox, follows Ram Barkai’s improbable quest to bring ice swimming to the Olympics, and charts a global movement that’s surged from fringe ritual to mainstream phenomenon. As his reporting deepens, so does his participation: Ballard graduates from cold plunges to competing alongside Olympians at the Ice Swimming World Championships. Along the way, his body and outlook change in surprising and measurable ways.
Unfolding through vivid scenes and unforgettable characters, The Plunge is a story of endurance, science, and human connection, an exploration of why, in a climate-controlled, screen-saturated world, so many people are choosing to seek out discomfort—and what becomes possible when we do hard things together.
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.