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Strides: Running Through History With an Unlikely Athlete | 
enlarge | Author: Benjamin Cheever Publisher: Rodale Books Category: Book
List Price: $25.95 Buy New: $4.93 You Save: $21.02 (81%)
New (29) Used (20) Collectible (1) from $4.93
Rating: 7 reviews Sales Rank: 17028
Media: Hardcover Edition: 1st Pages: 224 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.3 Dimensions (in): 9 x 6.3 x 1
ISBN: 1594862281 Dewey Decimal Number: 613.7172 EAN: 9781594862281 ASIN: 1594862281
Publication Date: September 18, 2007 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: EXCELLENT CONDITION! Hardcover Edition with dust cover. Binding is tight, contains no writing or highlighting, corners are sharp. Ships by next business day with delivery confirmation.
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Product Description
Acclaimed novelist Benjamin Cheever--author of The Plagiarist, Famous After Death, and The Good Nanny--brings his buoyant literary style to this impassioned memoir about the sport that changed his life. From Pheidippides, who rant the first marathon in 490 BC--bringing news to Athens of the Greek victory on the plains of Marathon--to our own soldiers in Iraq today, running is an integral part of human culture and legend. In Strides, heralded author Benjamin Cheever explores the role of running in human history while interspersing this account with revelations of his own decades-long devotion to the sport. Cheever has traveled the world writing features for Runner's World magazine, and he draws from this rich experience on every page. His adventures have taken him to Kenya in search of the secrets of the world's fastest long-distance runners and to a 10-K race with American soldeirs in Baghdad. Cheever celebrates the quotidian personal satisfaction of a morning run and the more exotic pleasures of the Medoc Marathon in Bordeaux, where fine wines are served at water stations and the first prize is the winner's weight in grand crus. He shares vivid moments from the New York Marathon and waxes rhapsodic about the granddaddy of American distance events--the Boston Marathon. But what truly distignuishes Strides as a memorable read is the unique lens through which this sparkling writer explores our deep bond to running, an experience he likens to that of being able to fly.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 2 more reviews...
Runner's Regret March 12, 2008 David Donelson 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
The joys of running are probably incomprehensible to those who don't indulge, but Benjamin Cheever does a manly job of explaining them. He also tells some great tales of runners throughout history, from the first marathoner, Pheidippides, who brought news to Athens about the Greek victory on the plains of Marathon, to U.S. soldiers who brave all sorts of horrible things to run in Iraq today. Cheever also draws on his own experiences running in dozens of marathons around the world and covering the scene as a writer for Runner's World magazine as well as the pleasures of a simple morning run around the neighborhood where he lives. I had a tough time getting through the book for a perverse reason: I happened to have picked it up the day my doctor told me my own running days were over. Back and foot problems coupled with nerve damage meant that I was sidelined for months if not forever. I may not be able to enjoy the sport in the first person any longer, but I can at least experience it with frequent re-readings of this chipper, well-expressed memoir.
Not just for runners...for anyone who knows/loves a runner! March 2, 2008 Nelson Aspen (Los Angeles, CA USA) 2 out of 3 found this review helpful
I'm sorry Mr. Cheever doesn't have a personal website to where we could direct fan mail, so maybe this will do. This likable literary sextagenerian has composed/compiled a marvelous collection of personal essays on recreational running that will honor and touch all of us who lace up our shoes most mornings. Touching, inspiring, thought provoking and (most importantly) identifiable tales of the recreational runner and all he/she endures in the mutually identifiable compulsion for personal achievement. Such a nice book for the runner's collection. Thanks, Ben!
An Instant Classic!!! February 9, 2008 Michael DENNISUK (trenton, michigan USA) 3 out of 4 found this review helpful
This is one of the best running books I have ever read! Mr. Cheever is an average, dedicated runner but he is a superb writer. He mixes his personal history with running with the history of the sport. He shares his personal journeys both physical (Kenya, France, Greece, Boston, etc) and emotional. I think one of the reasons I enjoyed this book so much was that we are about the same age and have traveled similar paths in our running lives (but he's a lot better runner). This book is thoroughly researched and he draws on a wide variety of material. A plus is the book's Appendix which includes a list of his favorite 26.2 running books of all time. This a book for the runner and non-runner alike. It moves to the top of my best running books list. A GREAT READ!!!
a runner reviews a runners book December 17, 2007 Carl Clement (New York) 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
this was an excellent, amusing, and educatioonal read for me who have been running for over 30 years
Informative,insightful and a joy to read December 9, 2007 Juanita W. Breland (Washington, DC) 1 out of 5 found this review helpful
I could not put this book down and was sorry to get to the last page. A brilliant read.
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