I Hate Running and You Can Too: How to Get Started, Keep Going, and Make Sense of an Irrational Passion
By (Author) Brendan Leonard
Workman Publishing
Artisan Books
3rd March 2021
16th March 2021
United States
General
Non Fiction
796.42019
Paperback
160
Width 134mm, Height 176mm, Spine 18mm
256g
I Hate Running and You Can Too is a humorous, punchy, motivating guide to running longer distances than some might think sensible whether thats a 5K or a marathon. Outside magazine columnist, chart-ist, and longtime runner, Brendan Leonard gets real on the love/hate relationship all runners have with the sport. He breaks down running in terms that speak to everyone who has ever struggled to get out the door and go for a run: getting comfortable being uncomfortable, how to start small and stick with it, that walking is a completely legitimate running strategy, and devising your own definition of success. Filled with 75 charts and graphs that give readers a sensible way to think about running, I Hate Running and You Can Too breaks down the reality of the training miles versus race miles, how to stay motivated, and what to do when faced with setbacks. I Hate Running and You Can Too shows readers that you wont always like running (sometimes youll even hate it), but if you just keep going, you might learn to love it too.
Filled with empathy, understanding, and enthusiasm, I Hate Running and You Can Too made us love running more than ever and gave us bonus love
for charts that make you laugh until your stomach hurts.
Megan Roche, MD, and David Roche, authors of The Happy Runner and coaches whose athletes have won more than twenty U.S. national championship races
As the author of Eat Bacon, Dont Jog, I assumed Id never run again. Then I read chapter two.
Grant Petersen, author and founder of Rivendell Bicycle Works
Brendan has a mad genius way to convey the mundane aspects of running. No matter if youre a total newbie or veteran runner, this book just might make you run a little farther or faster and have a laugh while doing it!
Scott Jurek, seven-time champion of the 100-mile Western States Endurance Run and New York Times bestselling author of Eat Run
Brendan Leonard has completed more than a dozen organized ultramarathons and marathons, including three of the most difficult 100-mile trail races in America. In 2019, he set out to complete 52 marathon-distance runs in 52 weeks, and survived, while having fun part of the time. Leonard is a columnist at Outside, and his writing has appeared in Runners World, National Geographic Adventure, Climbing, and Alpinist and on CNN.com and in dozens of other publications. He directed the 2017 short film How to Run 100 Miles, which screened at film festivals in more than 20 countries and on six continents and was viewed more than 5 million times online. He is the author of Surviving the Great Outdoors and the coauthor of The Camping Life. He lives in Denver, Colorado. Find him on Instagram at @semi_rad.