Undaunted: From Clearance Diver to Mercenary
By (Author) Hugh O'Brien
Random House Australia
Random House Australia
1st August 2014
Australia
General
Non Fiction
Autobiography: historical, political and military
Special and elite forces
359.9840994
Paperback
336
Width 155mm, Height 234mm, Spine 30mm
478g
Diving was a boys-own adventure, a jump into the unknown, full of devil-may-care attitudes. It welcomed you with one hand and cast you asunder with the other. It was a hideous bitch goddess and it drank the blood of the unprepared. After an ordinary childhood, Hugh Obi O Brien s life has been surprising. What took this sporty country boy from Sydney boarding school to directionless youth to navy clearance diver, slipping undetected through deep waters to defuse mines and dismantle bombs Upping that level of adrenaline, Obi joined the Special Forces counterterrorism unit TAG (East) no picnic. In a memoir full of eye-popping anecdotes, he colourfully recounts this wild ride. He reveals the painful transition from military life to his days risking spaghettification on underwater construction projects to private security work pirate-hunting in the Red Sea and tearing along the world s most dangerous roads in the Middle East. Undaunted is for anyone who's ever dreamed of taking a high-action, alternative route through life. This is an engaging and unexpected account by an operator at once tough, whimsical and funny, and always brutally honest.
The second of Amanda and Gerard O Brien s four sons, Hugh Obi Robert O Brien was born in 1979 and grew up on the family sheep and wheat farm, near Young in New South Wales. Obi attended Sydney boarding school St Joseph s College, a rugby academy, where old-school English customs and Dickensian group living honed his fast developing survival skills. His lacklustre performance in both sporting and academic endeavours ingrained a sense of underachievement that would fuel Obi s later success in the Special Forces. After high school, Obi attended university somewhat aimlessly. On the advice of his younger brother Phil, a member of the armed forces, Obi applied for the navy as a Clearance Diving candidate, and against all odds he found success and acceptance with these subaquatic supermen. With an unquenched thirst for adversity, Obi applied for Special Forces with the army s counterterrorism unit, TAG (East), a secretive team of divers and commandos, tasked with defending the domestic population from harm post-9/11. Admittance to this unit their failure rate is in the eightieth percentile was the defining moment of his life, the chance to serve where angels fear to tread and ma