The Race Against Time: Adventures in Late-Life Running
By (Author) Richard Askwith
Vintage Publishing
Vintage
18th June 2024
22nd February 2024
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Marathon and cross-country running
Popular science
Fitness and diet
Coping with / advice about ageing
Popular medicine and health
Track and field sports, athletics
Sports training and coaching
Exercise and workouts
Practical advice: Life hacks / handy tips
796.420846
Paperback
368
Width 129mm, Height 197mm, Spine 23mm
273g
A transformational quest for the secrets of happy, healthy, whole-life running that will change the way you think about growing older. A transformational quest for the secrets of happy, healthy, whole-life running that will change the way you think about growing older. Colourful, informative and inspiring, The Race Against Time is a story of cold science and heart-warming resilience; of champions and also-rans; of sprinting centenarians and forty-something super-athletes barely touched by age. Its heroes are experts and enthusiasts - scientists, coaches, runners - from many countries, each with a different story to tell. This is a book for anyone who has ever felt the healing power of running - or simply wondered about the effects of ageing. It is both a very personal account of one man's journey from despair to hope, and an exhilarating guide, explaining how timely adjustments to lifestyle and training can slow the progress of physiological decay, while sheer human spirit can, if you are lucky, keep you running happily and healthily, all the way into extreme old age.
Inspiring and moving -- Adharanand Finn
A hymn to the benefits of running, of being active, of the resilience of the human spirit, no matter your age. Inspirational * Observer *
This is a particularly inspiring book for everyone, not just older runners. An excellent read! * Stride *
Brilliant -- Jo Pavey
Wonderful * Athletics Weekly *
Richard Askwith has been a journalist for over 40 years. He has written six previous books, including his modern classic on fell running, Feet in the Clouds, which won the Best New Writer category at the British Sports Book Awards and was shortlisted for the William Hill and Boardman Tasker prizes, and he is now one of the UK's most celebrated writers on running. Running Free was shortlisted for the Thwaites-Wainwright Prize, and his evocative biography of Emil Zatopek, Today We Die A Little, was shortlisted in the Cross Sports Book Awards. His most recent book, Unbreakable- the Countess, the Nazis and the World's Most Dangerous Horse Race, won Biography of the Year at the Telegraph Sports Book Awards in 2020.