The Misplaced Artwork of Working: A Journey to Rediscover the Forgotten Essence of Human Motion
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(as of Nov 14, 2024 22:36:32 UTC – Particulars)
Bloomsbury presents The Misplaced Artwork of Working by Shane Benzie with Tim Main, learn by Clifford Samuel.
‘Heads up – right here’s the way to run like a professional’ – The Instances
‘A captivating e-book’ – Adharanand Finn, writer of Working With the Kenyans
‘I am satisfied that Shane’s insights had been had been instrumental in me profitable the Marathon des Sables for a second time’ – Elisabet Barnes, coach and athlete
‘Shane is the Indiana Jones of the working world’ – Damian Corridor, extremely marathon runner
‘You’ll be able to’t however assist exit the door in your subsequent run and attempt to put all of it into observe’ – Nicky Spinks, endurance runner
The Misplaced Artwork of Working is a chance to affix working approach analyst coach and motion guru Shane Benzie on his journey throughout 5 continents as he trains with and analyses the working fashion of a few of the most gifted athletes on the planet.
Half narrative, half sensible, this journey takes you to the foothills of Ethiopia and the ‘city of runners’; to the coaching grounds of world-record-holding marathon runners in Kenya; racing throughout the Arctic Circle and the mountains of Europe, by means of the sweltering sands of the Sahara and the hostility of a winter traverse of the Pennine Means, to witness the unbelievable pure motion of runners in these environments.
Alongside the best way, you’ll learn to incorporate pure motion methods into your individual working and listen to from a few of the prime athletes that Shane has coached over time. Whether or not skilled or simply tackling your first few miles, this groundbreaking e-book will provide help to uncover the misplaced artwork of working.
Clients say
Clients discover the pacing of the e-book riveting and simply relevant to a private working observe. Additionally they admire the writing high quality, saying it is well-written and flows fantastically. Readers point out the narrative contains each anecdotal and scientific assist.
AI-generated from the textual content of buyer opinions
13 reviews for The Misplaced Artwork of Working: A Journey to Rediscover the Forgotten Essence of Human Motion
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Austin –
Great stories and perspectives
As an experienced barefoot ultra runner, I recommend this book for inspiration and for perspectives on running form and training. Very interesting and useful.
Amazon Customer –
Eye openingâ¦
Beautifully written narrative including both anecdotal and scientific support for optimal running form. I think this book and Shaneâs perspective represents a revolution in how we look at running.Now when I go out for a run, instead of worrying about pace, I think about the subtle yet powerful cues that Shane suggests. Running has become a practice of movement and presence. It has opened a whole new world.
Cheryl R. –
Enjoyable
I really enjoyed this book. I really liked that it explains a better way to run. Hope I can incorporate the ideas into real practice.
Rebecca –
Amazing results!
I haven’t finished reading this yet but I also got it on audible for my daughter to listen to. A month ago she could barely run a half mile. Tonight she ran a little more than 10K in a little over an hour. She has only ran 3 or 4 times. Each time she far exceeds the first time. She is SO excited at how easy it has been. She said that her lungs used to give out before her body. But now she comes in hardly breathing hard at all. She said that she had NO idea she had the capability to run like this. My younger daughter is in an extreme fitness program in an international search and rescue program. She’s been working out with a trainer for months. The daughter who has listened to the book has passed her up in running with very little effort. She’s glowing.
Logan –
Finally Making Progress
Trying to coach myself or figure out what online articles would actually help me didn’t work very well. This book was the first resource I found that actually helped me improve running technique.
Charlie –
Brilliant concepts , buried deep in a memoir with not much info on how.
I’m really glad I found this book and applaud the author for bringing these concepts out. Lots of good stuff in the book. The thing is he takes you very much the long way around to these concepts, buried as they are a format which seemed to me to be 80-90% memoir and 10% factual nuggets. I do appreciate the context, but it’s a bit much. But again, the concepts – super stuff I wish I’d read a long time ago.I’d hope to see this author put out a more concise book at some point, perhaps more of a practical how to (now that we already have the Moir part squared away). Ideally a workbook that addresses the specific journey one might follow to good form as a function of where they’re starting from (which deficiencies to tackle first, for example maybe some photos os what good/bad looks like, etc…). Until he comes out with such a workbook, I’d definitely recommend this. Just brace yourself for taking the long way around to the ideas.
Ty Nelson –
great read
I really love the first half of this book, five stars for just that alone. It is well written and flows beautifully. The tales of his travels and his inquiry are riveting and easily applicable to a personal running practice. The book could end after part 1 though, so don’t feel bad if you stop half way through. Definitely worth the time and $ still.
Roy –
This was the most interesting boring book I have ever read.
This was the most interesting boring book I have ever read.Unfortunately, this book is full of ‘filler’.If you had to write a guide called, ‘How to make an instant coffee’, and the objective was to clearly explain the steps involved in making a cup, you might start your guide like this…’First, boil some water in a pan….’If you were Shane Benzie, you would start it like this,’I was on a plantation in India when I met a guy called Raj….’OK, so the book wouldn’t be a great read if it were just a list of procedures, but I feel that the book becomes quite boring as the author fills page after page with unnecessary tales of how he researched running…. His mantra could be, ‘Why write an interesting and informative chapter in 4 or 5 pages, when I can do it in 30?’There is a chapter about him doing research in the Arctic…. All I can remember from this chapter is how he broke his leg and, like a superman did not go to the doctor for a week… Woaw…. But I have absolutely no recollection as to what the point was with regards to his conclusions about running technique, as each chapter is supposed to be about his journey of discovery.The book starts well, and I was pleasantly surprised, as it was a lot better than Born to Run, which was a hyperbolic, driveling yawn fest, that reminded me of a badly written magazine article.The information about technique was useful and interesting, but I really feel that this could have been far more enjoyable, more to the pont and seem a lot more informative if it had lost at least a quarter of its content, if not half. I really wanted to enjoy it and learn from it, but the constant introduction of new characters and situations gets overwhelming and repetitive. It obscures the interesting and useful information that the book contains…. I would read this book and find my eyes becoming heavy, or my mind wandering….The techniques could have been accompanied with an anecdote and the points made clearly, but in half the time, and with half the pages.I guess the publishers insisted on a certain word count, or certain amount of pages in order for it to be sold.All of Shane’s points could have been made in a 15 or 20 minute youtube video. His points are important, and with his help my running has improved…. I just wish I had been able to enjoy his writing as well as his advice about running….3.5 stars. But .5 is not allowed.
Welshtrail –
This is the only book that I have ever read more than twice. It is easy to read and makes perfect sense. It has changed my running, making it more efficient and even a little faster.
Ali –
Excellent book
Juliano Freitas –
O livro é simples, e fala muita coisa que já vemos em outros livros, como cadência e inclinar o corpo pra frente. O foco do livro é desmistificar o deslocamento vertical na corrida, e provar os pontos através de viagens que o autor fez pelo mundo. Uma leitura legal, e posso dizer que influenciou minha maneira de correr.
Amazon Customer –
I have been struggling with injury and want to get back my love for running. The logical approach, the simplicity of how to run with elasticity and the way Shane makes the story engaging gives me great hope this will work for me.The book is light on for images in describing something that is very much look and feel – e.g. I had to google a tensegrity model and wasnt sure if I had the right one to understand what was described, but regardless this is a great book to help you think about your form, with a data driven approach that resonates with me.
Victor –
I took up casual running in my 40s for fitness and found myself out of breath with achy knee joints after any run over a mile. I’d read “Born to Run” and was inspired by its promise but also so stiff that I struggled to get to a mile, and couldn’t imagine doing a 5K without stopping to rest every few minutes. Maybe I wasn’t born to run after all!For a couple of years I just tried to push harder. I eventually did get to 5k but had tired knee joints after I did any 5k+ runs. Then I saw “The Lost Art of Running” in my list of recommendations. A month after buying the book and practising its advice on beautiful running form, I did a few 5Ks without my customary struggle and without any joint pains.Wow. I hadn’t expected running form to be so important. Critical aspects of posture such as head position and foot placement were explored by relating the principles of movement to the author’s travels around the world looking at the best runners of our day.The relationship of our body’s fascia and natural elasticity was brought together via a Buckminster Fuller inspired tensegrity model. The resulting science was then simplified into easy to use checklists (such as HCAC Head Chest Arms Cadence) and movement questions to ask while running to prompt positive body awareness.With hindsight it all makes sense. There were good reasons for my tired legs. Beautiful running form changes so much because it uses the body’s natural elasticity (in the fascia) instead of forcing muscles and joints to bear most of the load.Today I decided to try my first 10k run and was pleasantly surprised by how easy it felt compared to my former 5k runs. I have none of my previous knee pain and didn’t find myself out of breath.I’m so grateful to the authors for putting this book together, I hope you continue to revolutionize running for the masses. I’ll never run like the guys at Iten training with Brother Colm, but I’m already running far better than I ever have in my life.