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As soon as a Runner: A Novel

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The undisputed basic of working novels and one of the beloved sports activities books ever printed, As soon as a Runner tells the story of an athlete’s goals amid the turmoil of the 60s and the Vietnam conflict.

Impressed by the writer’s expertise as a collegiate champion, the novel follows Quenton Cassidy, a aggressive runner at fictional Southeastern College whose lifelong dream is to run a four-minute mile. He’s lower than a second away when the turmoil of the Vietnam Struggle period intrudes into the staid recesses of his faculty’s athletic division. After he turns into concerned in an athletes’ protest, Cassidy is suspended from his monitor staff. Underneath the tutelage of his good friend and mentor, Bruce Denton, a graduate scholar and former Olympic gold medalist, Cassidy provides up his scholarship, his girlfriend, and probably his future to withdraw to a monastic retreat within the countryside and start coaching for the race of his life in opposition to the best miler in historical past.

A uncommon insider’s account of the extremely intense lives of elite distance runners, As soon as a Runner is an inspiring, humorous, and spot-on story of 1 particular person’s quest to change into a champion.

Writer ‏ : ‎ Scribner; Reprint version (April 6, 2010)
Language ‏ : ‎ English
Paperback ‏ : ‎ 304 pages
ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 1416597891
ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1416597896
Merchandise Weight ‏ : ‎ 2.31 kilos
Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 0.87 x 5.51 x 8.27 inches

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Prospects discover the e book good, enjoyable, and well-written. They describe the writing high quality as shiny prose and fantastic phrasing. Readers additionally describe the story as partaking, fascinating, and well-constructed. They discover the e book inspiring and motivating. Opinions differ on the character growth, with some discovering them compelling and likable, whereas others say it is unimaginable to narrate to them.

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13 reviews for As soon as a Runner: A Novel

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  1. heinouscrankin

    John Parker got it exactly right
    I read Once a Runner in 1978 between my sophomore and junior years in high school. I was running cross-country and track. I thought it was a fantastic book and it is still one of my all-time favorites. It was a motivator for me then, pushing me toward consistent training and fewer empty squares in my training log. For someone who took up running later, in their 20s or 30s, running 10ks and half-marathons on the road, it probably would not feel as relevant, as reflected in other reviews.It is not Hemingway nor Shakespeare, does not pretend to be, and I do not think any runner who is a fan would pretend that it is. What it does, it does well. It tells the story of what it is like to be a young, competitive middle or long distance runner on a team. John Parker captures every emotion, feeling, situation, memory, motivation, and obstacle germane to that. He does it so well that anyone who has trained and competed as a distance runner on a high school or college team, would read this and say “that’s it! He got it exactly right.” And that is a bit ironic, since Quenton Cassidy at one point thinks to himself, “It was a good thing, he decided, not to have everything available in capsule form.”Much of the criticism I’ve seen is rather amusing. Cassidy and his teammates are labeled as arrogant. Aren’t many world class athletes? To reach that level, confidence (often masking insecurity) spilling over into arrogance is pretty much common.The book is called sexist, because Parker leans on some stereotypes (sorority girls in the South, Andrea not handling the breakup well). Hey, Cassidy’s girlfriend is premed and studying organic chemistry, this circa 1970, presumably, when not so many women entered medicine. Hardly sexist there. And because a woman tries to seduce Cassidy at a party (has no woman ever seduced a man?), and because “where are the female athletes? There are NONE in the book.” Female athletes? Parker graduated from University of Florida around 1970. The school did not field a women’s track team until 1973, so that is what he knew.Complaints about the timeline. Which Olympics did Denton compete in? Pre and Rose and Drayton and Ron Hill and others mentioned in a way that doesn’t all mesh. But, who cares? It’s a novel. If timelines and people and events are blurred, that’s OK. Read the sequel, Again to Carthage, and you can really get your knickers in a bunch over the timeline. It’s fiction.Criticism of Cassidy and Denton’s training volume (“That’s waaayy too many miles! Nobody should do that much.”) Again, it’s a novel, not a “how to” manual. There are training books out there, and websites. Go find them if that’s what you are looking for. And, that kind of mileage is what guys WERE doing in the late 1960s and 1970s, Frank Shorter included. John Parker should know, he trained and raced with Shorter, Jack Bacheler, Barry Brown, Marty Liquori, and others. (Hint: Bruce Denton is based on Jack Bacheler.)Criticism of the hermit thing (“That’s unhealthy and a bad idea and nobody should isolate themselves like that.”) Again, it’s a NOVEL. And there surely have been athletes who did that, training for the bigtime in whatever sport they were pursuing. Nobody is saying it’s healthy. But it probably got a lot of athletes to the Olympics or World Championships in their chosen sport.Scoffing at some things “just couldn’t have happened”, preposterous events like the Honor Court prank and the 60x 440 workout. But they did. John Parker did both of those things himself. Read his interview on Gary Cohen Running Interviews.Complaints that there was no backstory of Cassidy’s childhood. Heck, it’s fiction. Make up your own childhood story for him. Or read the prequel, Racing the Rain.If you’re a young person running on a team, in high school or college, read it.

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  2. Matt

    A must-read for any competitive runner
    I was told this book was a must-read for competitive runners of any level, and I maintain that stance. It’s not that the book is particularly well-written or the plot is particularly well-constructed or the character development is particularly nuanced. None of those things are true, though I found the book adequate on all of those fronts. What sets this book apart is it’s accurate portrayal of the lifestyle and mindset of an elite collegiate runner. It does this so perfectly that it still rings true many decades later. Which is not to say that everything in this book should be put on a pedestal as exemplary for modern runners, but it feels real and that is worth something, especially when there are so few works of fiction about distance running. That being said, this book is extremely self-gratifying. If you are in the “running” tribe, you should read it and you will probably enjoy it. If you are not in the “running” tribe, you could read it and you probably won’t enjoy it.

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  3. Kindle Customer

    Perfect Read for Your Miles of Trials
    As Quenton Cassidy trains to run the biggest race of his life, Once a Runner may look like a novel with a conventional story arc, but to the runner-in-the-know: runners (and probably most athletes at Cassidy and author Parker’s level of competition) are not conventional people.There is something more lurking as Cassidy loses his girlfriend, is kicked out of school, off of the running team and out of his house. As he decamps to a friend’s country cabin, he is left only with what has been the only thing in his head anyway: running. Perversely, by losing it all, he gets to focus his life on one race. He runs. He trains. He obsesses. He always has; now, he does so freely, without all the distractions.And, there is a purity and enjoyment evident that is the domain of the elite athlete alone. Parker returns again and again to that mysterious strain of human, and – in many ways – how they are ill-suited to so many of life’s more mundane duties and tasks by virtue of the same skill and mind sets that make them so perfectly suited to elite performance. Quenton realizes (or at least his girlfriend does, and he runs his way to the realization through the book) that a guy who can turn it on the way he can in competition is not suited to turning it off in the rest of his life. This is the famous Michael Jordan, Kobe Bryant, “they have to beat you at checkers” conceit.But, parker does it in fiction and does it very well. He surrounds his reflections on running with a healthy cast of characters. Admittedly, they recede as “Cass” sequesters himself in the woods to wrestle with the demon (running) that he can only conquer by using his one coping mechanism (running). Nonetheless, there is genuine humor in the early phases of the book as Parker introduces town father Sidecar Doobey, of his mythical town (adapted from the Gainesville, Florida locale where Parker himself was an SEC mile champion).For runners – even weekend road racers – Parker does an admirable job of evoking the running subculture: down to the equipment, the obsession over seconds, the constant brain-rattling focus on training, etc. He writes, “in the waking world his whole being centered around covering ground quickly on foot. At this he really had no equals save a few dozen others scattered about the country and world who also woke to such disquieting dreams. Quenton Cassidy knew every one of them by name.” Talk about subculture!Every runner shares some sense, however limited, of the bonds that form in the “Miles of Trials” that help Cass define himself and his friendships. And, as Parker beautifully portrays in the person of Bruce Denton, Cass’ Olympic gold medalist confidante, every runner knows the feeling that while only few people may know the difference between the and a near competitor, it is there.Of course not every revelation will resonate with the weekend runner as it does with a champion miler. But, the book is packed with the kind of running mysticism that will have avid runners locked in to what is otherwise a very solid novel.

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  4. MPG

    Incredible Story.
    The best book ever on the life of competitive running.

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  5. Ganja Ranja

    Ate the entire book!
    The pages were very flavor. Tasted very good to eat. I had it for dinner but you can peobably has for any meal! Very recommend.

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  6. Patrick F.

    Must read for everyone who was once a runner
    This book is so well written. If there were six stars I would give it that. It is for everyone who was once a runner. And everyone was once a runner, even if they were born with no legs or lost them to some war or an accident or disease. And we all are now and we always will be.

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  7. Amazon Customer

    Okay book
    A little hard to get into. Good overall story but not the greatest read. Few sections went on and on about unrelated things to the main story and running. 5/10

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  8. Geoffrey L Birnbaum

    Perfect product – love it.
    Came in great shape! Not my favorite book though…

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  9. Dominique Merle

    Un livre qui transpire le vécu des athlètes à haut niveau de performance. Un livre avec un vocabulaire extrêmement riche qui donne une description particulièrement authentique de ce que représente la course à pied en termes d’effort physique, de mental et de la philosophie du coureur. Bref un livre qui parle pour tout coureur à pied. Seule l’expérience vécue alliée à un vocabulaire puissant est capable de traduire tout ce que ressent et vie un coureu

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  10. Óscar

    Un clásico de la literatura del atletismo

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  11. Pedro Ramirez

    Personalmente hablando mi hábito de lectura tiene algunas áreas de oportunidad, sin embargo, lo que es muy cierto es que las novelas no son de mi interés. Sin embargo, puedo decir que Once a Runner, siendo una novela, es un libro que disfruto mucho y recomiendo plenamente a corredores experimentados, nuevos y ocasionales (si lo leen, no continuarán en este estatus por mucho tiempo).

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  12. Ronan

    As a modest runner myself who is chasing my own goal, this book is inspiring. It truely captures the sacrifices that are required to achieve your goal.

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  13. Arvind

    One of the very few fictions based on a runner and a definite read for anyone who likes running. The author (being a competitive runner himself in his days) captures the life of a competitive college runner from America really well. But so many things he talks rings true for many of us amateur runners.Quenton Cassidy is a very loveable character with his talent on the track and wit of it. He trains hard with his team mates and ‘runs through’ everything (the little hub caps life rolls into your lane) life throws at him. By end of the book you feel like training for one of the most historic and beautiful distance events there is – the mile. The book definitely leaves you inspired to get you through your trials of miles.You also get a glimpse of high school and college running scene the US used to have, with special appearance from Frank Shorter – the american olympian and legend. And you wonder how things would have been if you had something similar here.Now on to the sequel of the book “Again to Carthage”.

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    As soon as a Runner: A Novel
    As soon as a Runner: A Novel

    Original price was: $18.99.Current price is: $11.32.

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