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Larger Leaner Stronger: The Easy Science of Constructing the Final Male Physique

Original price was: $24.99.Current price is: $19.97.

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The bestselling health ebook for males who need to acquire 25-35 kilos of lean muscle and lose as a lot fats or extra in simply 3-5 hours per week—and with out giving up scrumptious meals or doing grueling exercises.

Is Larger Leaner Stronger a physique constructing ebook that may allow you to pack on brain-shrinking quantities of muscle in 30 days flat?

No.

Is it a health diet ebook filled with doubtful food regimen and train “hacks” and “shortcuts” for melting stomach fats sooner than a roided hornet?

Completely not.

However is it a science-based energy coaching ebook (and diet ebook) that’ll demystify constructing muscle and shedding fats and present you precisely easy methods to get a lean, sturdy, and muscular physique with out spending hours within the gymnasium each day?

And whereas nonetheless having fun with your favourite meals, like hamburgers, pizza, and ice cream?

Sure.

And also you’ll see seen leads to the mirror and gymnasium in your first month on this system.

As a result of right here’s the deal:

Muscle constructing and fats loss aren’t almost as sophisticated as you’ve been led to imagine.
You need not: Obsess over “clear consuming” and avoiding “unhealthy” meals like sugar, meat, and bread. Some meals are extra nutritious and needs to be eaten extra ceaselessly than others. That is it.
You need not: Grind by hours of punishing energy coaching exercises each week. Sweating buckets, getting actually sore, coaching till bone-tired . . . all wholly overrated for gaining muscle and energy.
You need not: Slog away on the treadmill. In truth, you need not do any cardio train in any respect to shed ugly stomach fats and even get six-pack abs.
These are only a few of the dangerous health lies and myths that preserve guys small, fats, and weak.

And Larger Leaner Stronger will educate you one thing that the majority of these males won’t ever know:

The right way to reduce by all of the confusion and litter and create clear, structured, no-nonsense food regimen and coaching plans tailor-made to your health targets, circumstances, and preferences.

Listed below are only a few of the belongings you’ll uncover inside this muscle constructing ebook for males:
The ten greatest health myths and errors that preserve guys frail and confused. For instance, “energy are all that issues,” “carbs and sugars make you fats,” and “some guys don’t have the genetics to get large.”
The first driver of muscle development that forces your muscle tissue to get greater and stronger. And no, it has nothing to do with “muscle confusion,” “practical coaching,” or some other pseudoscientific health nonsense.
The right way to create meal plans for constructing muscle and shedding fats with meals you like so that you by no means really feel starved, disadvantaged, or such as you’re “on a food regimen” (and particularly a “bodybuilding food regimen”).
A 12-month exercise program that exhibits you easy methods to use rules and strategies taught within the ebook to construct a full chest, extensive shoulders and again, highly effective legs, and powerful arms.
A no-BS information to health dietary supplements that’ll prevent a whole lot if not hundreds of {dollars} on ineffective (and generally even harmful) capsules, powders, and potions.
And that’s not all, both . . .
Larger Leaner Stronger is likely one of the hottest bodybuilding books of all time, with over 800,000 copies bought in 16 languages, and it has helped tens of hundreds of males of all ages and talents rework their physique composition, health, and well being.
338 peer-reviewed scientific research assist the Larger Leaner Stronger system of consuming, coaching, and recovering for shedding fats and constructing muscle and energy.
Larger Leaner Stronger is recurrently revised primarily based on the newest findings in diet, train, and supplementation analysis, with the newest model (fourth version) launched in 2023.
Right here’s the underside line:

You will get that head-turning “Hollywood hunk” physique with out following bizarre, excessive, or sophisticated food regimen, train, or supplementation strategies and methods.

And this exercise ebook for males exhibits you the way.

So, get your copy now, and begin your journey to an even bigger, leaner, and stronger you.

Prospects say

Prospects discover the knowledge useful and academic. They describe the ebook as an pleasurable, straightforward learn filled with knowledge and simple data. Readers additionally point out it is concise and easy. They are saying it is definitely worth the value and money and time nicely spent. Moreover, they point out they’ve seen a marked enchancment in energy.

AI-generated from the textual content of buyer opinions

7 reviews for Larger Leaner Stronger: The Easy Science of Constructing the Final Male Physique

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  1. Lone Rider

    Life Changing
    There are very few books I would call “life changing,” but this is without a doubt one of them. I’m 41 years old and have spent most of my adult life in the gym, not aspiring to be a bodybuilder necessarily but simply striving to stay strong and lean, to feel good and to be healthy. My goal has always been to maintain an athletic look without excessively long and complicated workouts or bizarre and restrictive diets. I own or have read stacks and stacks of fitness books, from Arnold’s Encyclopedia to obscure spiral bound books from self-published authors, on every topic from the paleo diet to barefoot running to bodyweight exercises to genuine bodybuilding. I’ve wasted more money and paper than I care to think about over the years on magazines such as Men’s Fitness, Men’s Health, and various bodybuilding mags to little or no avail. I’ve tried every conceivable workout method and fad from crossfit to circuit training to bodypump to good old fashioned iron pumping with supersets, drop sets and more. While I picked up some valuable information and skills along the way, my sheer dedication to fitness is what pulled me through and gave me results, mediocre though they were.But then I stumbled upon Bigger Leaner Stronger (BLS) on Amazon. Always open to reading new material, but jaded from a couple of decades of reading poor to mediocre books, I bought it with no great expectations. The first chapter or two is pretty much what you’d expect in a book on this topic — big promises. But unlike any other book I’ve ever read on the topic, BLS delivers on those promises, and how! Of course I couldn’t know that until I had finished the book and actually tried the program for awhile, so here is a summary of my experience.As of this writing, I’m 11 weeks into the program. I started off at 175 pounds and 17.5% body fat. Today I’m 166 pounds and 11.5% body fat. If you run the numbers, I’ve lost 9 pounds, BUT I’ve also put on a few pounds of muscle at the same time, so the results are far more dramatic than simply losing 9 pounds. I’m on what’s called a “cutting diet” (outlined in the book) which is designed primarily to make you lose fat while maintaining or slightly gaining muscle. After the cutting diet, you follow with a bulking diet which does the opposite — primarily designed to build muscle quickly while minimizing fat gain. A few cycles of cutting and bulking (with your workouts, of course) and you can have a body like Mike (the author of BLS.) I say this as a skeptic who was blown away by the results that this is without a doubt the easiest, most efficient, most effective, simplest and most comprehensible way to get the body you want. The real kicker here is that there’s almost nothing new in this book. There are no revolutionary secrets or cutting-edge fads, no complicated workouts or strange exercises, and no diet “tricks,” miracle pills or evil foods to fear. It’s all just basic sensible eating and good old fashioned sweat, and yet it works magic. So if there’s nothing new in it, why is this book so good? First, because Mike did what none of the rest of us took the time to do: he did his homework. I don’t mean he read Muscle and Fitness Magazine. I mean he read primary clinical research in peer reviewed journals, and then he tested it on himself. Second, and this is where he really shines, because Mike has an ability that apparently other authors of fitness books lack: the skill to take what he learned and put it in a clear, concise, highly organized, highly digestible format that anyone can understand without getting lost in the weeds or bored to tears. Mike has exhaustively researched and put into practice every principle in his book, and he includes references to all of the clinical trials he read so you can read the primary research for yourself if you’re so inclined. In addition to that, his website, muscleforlife.com, is brimming with FREE, interesting articles that go in greater depth about many topics and answer questions that newbies to the program will invariably have (as I myself did.) And as if that weren’t enough, Mike’s really good about personally responding to questions posted on the website. He also does live Q&A’s online which are helpful, as well as video podcasts which are also helpful.Here’s a bullet list of the major points I got from the book:*a few sets of heavy reps of basic lifts is all you need to build a ton of muscle*a few sets of heavy reps of basic lifts burns more fat that cardio*a few sets of heavy reps of basic lifts keeps your gym time surprisingly short*eating the right ratio of fats/carbs/protein is absolutely essential for success*eating the right ratio of fats/carbs/protein need not be an exhaustive chore*eating the right ratio of fats/carbs/protein need not be absurdly restrictive*eating the right ratio of fats/carbs/protein is not a starvation diet*doing cardio is important, but not as important as you think*doing cardio isn’t nearly as miserable or long as you think if you do it right*tracking your progress is absolutely essential to success and is hugely motivating too*tracking your progress need not be an exhaustive chore — in fact I find it fun*your genetics, age, perceived bad luck, lack of experience, past failures and current state of couch-potatoness will not define your success on this program*your commitment to this program will define your success on this program*its not a program, it’s a lifestyle change just like a hobby, having kids, having pets, having a career or cooking at home instead of eating out every nightHere’s how I think the book could be improved:There are a few details missing from the book that you won’t even realize are missing until you have a question as a result of actually being on the program. For example, your weight loss is unlikely to be linear, and it may even stop weeks or months into the program if you’re trying to cut fat. But that’s no reason to despair. There are simple ways to get it moving again, which are discussed in exact detail in various articles on the website. One important, very simple, very effective method is the reverse diet which isn’t discussed in BLS. It is discussed in the book’s sequel, Beyond Bigger Leaner Stronger, which is for advanced lifters who’ve already gone through BLS and have been lifting at least 1-2 years. It is also discussed, as I already mentioned, in articles on the website for free. I also found his treatment of supplements a bit confusing. He’s extremely critical of supplements in the BLS book, but if you go to his website you’ll find that he’s got his own line of supplements which at first seems extremely hypocritical. I’ve since come to understand that he’s critical of the supplement industry as a whole for their various frauds (and rightly so) but that there are a number of mostly natural supplements that have been clinically proven to be effective, and his supplements are just that: clinically effective dosages of clinically proven substances, and nothing more. He also has made it clear that while supplements (even his own) can be helpful in getting faster results, they are by no means necessary and are absolutely no substitute for proper diet and exercise.Here are some tips/advice for anyone new to the program:The number one issue I feared with this program is the one thing I vowed never in my life to do: count calories or exclude entire food groups from my diet. If you share that fear, read on. I’m a prolific home cook. Cooking is one of my greatest joys in life and I hold the joys of food — from growing it and hunting it, to cooking it and eating it, to sharing it with friends and family — in reverence above nearly all else in life. I love dairy. I love breads. I love pork. I love dessert. And I will not give these things up. Ever. I have a small farm and raise pork and dairy goats, poultry and eggs, honey and red meat. I also hunt and fish. And I eat it all, every bit. So with great trepidation I read Mike’s stance on food, and I thought, well, at least I don’t have to give up any foods. I figured that maybe I could try tracking my calories, fat, etc IF it’s not a lot of trouble and doesn’t detract from my joy of food in any way. And you know what? After I thought about it, and then tried it, I realized I had been missing a tactic of awesome proportions. Let me explain. Even before BLS, I planned meals. I have to, but also I like to. I cook every meal. Literally, every meal. In order to feed my household and use the exceptional foods I grow on the farm and hunt in the mountains, I have to plan for what’s coming out of the garden each week, or what I’ll need to take out of the freezer to thaw in time, or what incidentals like baking powder I’ll need to pick up at the grocery store. I already had seasonally and weekly recurring meals and treats such as lasagna, beef stew, pumpkin bread, pancakes, etc. on the menu, and typically set aside Sunday to do the bulk of my weekly cooking so that weekday meals are a no-brainer. The only thing I wasn’t doing was tracking the nutrient ratios. But Mike proposed an ingenious solution: the spreadsheet. Instead of writing down my weekly meal planning on the chalkboard as I had previously done, I just moved it to a simple spreadsheet. The spreadsheet had the advantage of both making my planning faster and easier AND keeping track of my nutrient ratios automatically so I scarcely had to think about it. Mike shows examples of how to build and use a spreadsheet in his book but it’s really simple. I took it one step further. Admittedly my spreadsheet savvy is slightly more advanced than the average Joe, but nothing I did can’t be learned on Google in a few minutes. Nothing. Here’s what I did:For my favorite lasagna recipe, I put all the ingredients and their amounts in the spreadsheet, along with their total sodium, fiber, protein, fat, carbs and calories. Nutrient ratios can be gotten from boxes of food, manufacturer websites and from calorieking.com. It was a one time task that takes less than 10 minutes per recipe. Then, I just summed each column and divided by the number of servings in that recipe. In my weekly planner, I created separate tabs for each day of the week, and on each tab I created dropdown boxes where I could pick from the list of recipes I’d entered into my spreadsheet. So for example, on the Monday tab I simply click the dropdown box for lunch and choose any food or recipe I’d previously entered into my spreadsheet. Let’s say I choose lasagna. Well, the sodium, fiber, protein, carbs, fat and calories for 1 serving of lasagna automatically populate the fields for lunch and add them to the daily total. If I want 2 servings of lasagna, I just change the quantity to 2 and all the numbers are updated. Repeat for breakfast, dinner, post-workout, snacks, whatever, and you can instantly build your day and, subsequently, your entire week and never have to manually add a single number in your head. The only requirements are that you take the time upfront to build the spreadsheet and spend a few minutes per recipe to enter them into the spreadsheet. After that, you just have to commit to using it as an extremely fast and effective meal planner. I just added 2-4 recipes per week in the beginning until I had a large number of my favorite recipes in the spreadsheet, and now all I have to do is sit down and chose from the list what I’m going to cook that week. Adding something new is literally and figuratively a piece of cake.Another tip for the newbie is to track the physical changes in your body. I also use a spreadsheet for this. It’s very simple: weigh yourself every day (on the same scale, at the same time, like first thing in the morning) and enter that into your spreadsheet. I added a chart on a separate tab and I can see how my weight has changed over the weeks. It tends to go up and down daily, but the overall trend is down and it’s extremely encouraging to look at, especially on days where you “feel” like you aren’t making progress. One look at your little chart and all doubts are quashed. I find it extremely motivating. In a few clicks you can also add a regression line (I know, it sounds scary, but it’s not.) It’s just a line that shows the trend in your data points (your weight.) Basically it’s your average weight loss shown in a straight line that runs across your chart. You can use it to very effectively predict when you’ll hit a target weight. I also use the spreadsheet to track my body fat percentage, waist and other body measurements, calculate my lean body mass (LBM), my total daily energy expenditure (TDEE), basal metabolic rate (BMR) and other things Mike explains in BLS. These terms may sound complicated but I assure you, if you can learn to drive a car you can very easily learn how to keep a simple spreadsheet and calculate these numbers and understand what they mean. The beauty of the spreadsheet is that once it’s all set up, you just add your daily weight and everything else is updated for you.A third tip is to use the website, muscleforlife.com. It’s absolutely brimming with fabulous, plain-English, no-nonsense articles that will answer most, if not all, of your additional questions. Failing that, just post a comment online and Mike will respond. Failing even that, you can call Legion legionathletics.com (Mike’s supplement company) and you can ask a live person your question. They’re very friendly and helpful.My final tip: take advantage of Mike’s suggestions. He doesn’t suggest stuff willy-nilly. His supplements are truly effective. The lifting shoes and body fat calipers he recommends really work. His exercises and diet advice are like magic. Again on his website you’ll find so many tidbits of helpful advice, but don’t feel like you have to know it all or have all the “stuff” before you can start. A lifestyle change like this isn’t something you achieve overnight. You don’t have to be an expert on day 1. Indeed you can’t be. It’s the journey that makes you the expert. As Lao Tzu said, the journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step, but you’re lucky to have BLS because it lays out such a clear map.

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  2. Continuum

    Practical, effective, and straightforward. Worth more than every penny.
    This is a very practical, useful, and effective guide to building a healthier body. The title really does say it all. I began with Mike’s first edition in November of 2014 after having used a few other books/journal articles as guides to strengthening and conditioning. To be fair, the previous books I had read had helped me cut bodyfat (from 23% to 15%) and add equivalent amount of muscle over the course of about 18 months. However, I had gotten stuck in terms of further gains and hadn’t made any progress in over half a year, despite following the prior programs. I was eating very well, was working out several times a week, but had reached a plateau. When I read reviews of BLS, I thought “no way is it that straightforward.”It is that straightforward. In 6 months, my strength has increased about 30% on all the big lifts, I’ve dropped to 10% bodyfat, while still adding muscle (my weight hovers between 175 and 177, meaning as fat is dropping, muscle is adding). My bodyweight is finally creeping up toward my goal weight (which I admit is totally arbitrary, but so what?).I could go into a lot of detail on the chapters and content, but it boils down to a few things that make me highly recommend this book, especially the second edition:1. Mike supports what he says with references. As a Doctor of Physical Therapy who is board-certified as an Orthopedic Certified Specialist, this is very important to me. I try to use the best evidence I can find when I treat patients, so I expect the same if someone is telling me something about the health of my body. Yes, there are other studies out there that conflict with some of the results he mentions. That’s the scientific method at work. Mike backs up what he recommends. I’m sure that if he finds stronger studies refuting what he says, he’d be the first to say so.2. The workouts are challenging, but very effective and very doable. I have exactly one hour in the gym between dropping my kids at school and getting to my clinic. I don’t have time to waste. I get all the workouts done in an hour or less, even with the addition of a few things in the second edition. Mike is right on about “muscle confusion” being nonsense. It is exactly nonsense. I found that changing my entire routine every 3-4 weeks, as recommended in the previous programs I used, resulted in the first week being wasted as I figured out the right weights, figured out the right form, etc. By the time I started making progress, it was time to switch again. I love that I now know my weekly workout routine in my head (but I still track every detail) and that I can look back 6 months on a particular lift and see how far I’ve come. There is a collection of older guys in the gym each day when I’m there. One of them said to me last week, as he was spotting me on the incline bench, “You increased the weight AGAIN? Didn’t you just go up on this a week ago?”3. Mike hammers home nutrition as the major player and he is right. I can’t tell you how many patients complain to me that they just “can’t lose weight” even though they pound away on the elliptical or the treadmill every day as they are holding a can of soda in one hand and a muffin in the other. Unless I track my food intake, I find that I am almost never eating enough calories in a day to gain the mass I want to gain. It is definitely about what you eat, but also about how much.4. Mike will answer your questions personally (even when your questions are clearly already answered in the book). It seems to be his life’s mission to help everyone get strong and healthy (while looking great in the process). He is very supportive, highly encouraging, and extremely patient. He’ll help you if you ask.5. I look better than ever at 42. Shallow? Superficial? Yep. So? I’ve never been a muscular guy. Ever. I’ve always been skinny. A couple years ago, I was skinny with a developing gut. Now I look good: not incredible, but good…and I’m still making gains. I don’t cringe at the thought of going swimming in a public place. It feels awesome to see the fruits of my labor. You will, too.

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  3. Chris

    This book is currently changing my life for the better. It is much more thorough than I expected when looking at the cover, I have been humbled.Great education on mindset, fitness, food, and of course the workouts.Coming from the CrossFit world, which I still love, these workouts I don’t dread as much. They are challenging and satisfying instead of feeling spent and exhausted.Cheers, and God bless.

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  4. Leo Tobias Küchler

    This book answers all essential questions about achieving fitness through strength training. In short the book is amazing and has helped me get some quite good results from my training. I also know likely points that I could still improve due to it, but those haven’t stuck yet. Of course it doesn’t help most people perform a transformation to the degree you can upload it on youtube, as this is and will always remain challenging, but in my opinion it is the best source of information on this topic currently around.

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  5. adarsh

    I recently started my fitness journey and the inputs from this book will play a major role in coming years. I read a lot of books on health , Diet and metabolism but this is the 1st on fitness and I am not dissapoited , overall he emphasizes the importance of fitness through strength training and its relative advantages, diet absolutely plus the most important role and he gives a lot of ideas around it. He provides what exercises at what frequency you need to do and provides tips on supplements and how to use them.

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  6. Nelson

    This is a book that made me fall in love with training and bodybuilding.

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  7. Milai Capiau

    This book not only gives you all the practical information you need to get started with dieting and training, but it also explains the science behind them, all of which is backed up by studies. This makes it a very trustworthy book, because I think it’s important to understand these basic scientific principles before you get started. Bigger Leaner Stronger basically gives you everything you need to know to start off on your fitness journey. I highly recommend it!

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    Larger Leaner Stronger: The Easy Science of Constructing the Final Male Physique
    Larger Leaner Stronger: The Easy Science of Constructing the Final Male Physique

    Original price was: $24.99.Current price is: $19.97.

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