I received a copy of this book as a gift (family friends with the publisher).  
Pint's highly descriptive writing style and humorous, down-to-earth view of the 
world makes this book a fun read.  The caves he describes are simply amazing 
and he makes it clear throughout that there is much, much more yet to be 
discovered under the sands.

 
Andrew G. Gluesenkamp, Ph.D.
700 Billie Brooks Drive
Driftwood, Texas 78619
(512) 799-1095
a...@gluesenkamp.com


________________________________
 From: R D Milhollin <rdmilhol...@yahoo.com>
To: Texascavers List <texascavers@texascavers.com> 
Sent: Thursday, November 15, 2012 1:51 PM
Subject: [Texascavers] Book Review
 

UNDERGROUND IN ARABIA John Pint

 2012, Selwa Press  978-0-97011-575-1  $12.95 PB

(from Saudi Aramco World Sep/Oct 2012)

"What happens when an American English teacher finds his way into Saudi 
Arabia's "underground"? This is the story John Pint tells in a witty, engaging 
and thoroughly entertaining record of his caving adventures during working 
stints in the kingdom beginning in 1981. Pint originally traded teaching and 
(caving) in France for a job at what is now King Fahd University of Petroleum 
and Minerals in Dhahran and resumed his hobby almost immediately. Soon, he and 
fellow explorers landed a big find near Ma'aqala, north of Riyadh, in an area 
rich with dahls, a term that means "a natural pit that... might provide access 
to water," Pint notes. Exploration revealed natural formations like stalactites 
and gypsum flowers, previously undocumented in Saudi caves. This was just the 
beginning of Pint's quarter-century of spelunking in the kingdom, his finds 
enthralling and paving the way for academics to study a beautiful world beneath 
Saudi Arabia's often-forbidding
 surface.
-Caitlin Clark

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