books:
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The Nonrunner's Marathon Guide for Women: Get Off Your Butt and On with Your Training
Dawn Dais
Seal Press
, 2007 - 220 pages
average customer review:
based on 55 reviews
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highly recommended
Fantastic Realistic Hilariously Inspirational!
Perfect for any woman considering (or having committed to) the daunting task of moving
your
rear
off
the couch and on to the track! So funny, so honest, so motivational and realistic everyone who reads this book will finish it just as I did, totally inspired and ready to start the journey! I've already purchased my Water-Holder
Butt Thingy
and modeled it to the laughter of my family... Thanks Dawn for showing me I can actually do this!
Highly Recommended Fun!
I finished this book the day after it arrived. So funny, so inspiring. This author freely admits that she was committed to laziness and yet finished a
marathon
. (albeit in pain!) This is truly more of a memoir than a
training manual
, but it should inspire you to
get
off
your
butt
! Even if you have no intention of ever running a marathon, this book will convince you to set a goal and accomplish something that seems impossible. A truly enjoyable read.
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Must-Have for Any New Runner
Dawn Dais is hilarious!
Get this
book if you are even considering taking up running or starting a
training routine
for any length of race. It is more of a light read than a manual, but at the same time I find myself referring back to specific things in the book.
A wonderful read and great for moral support
I picked up The (Non)Runner's
Marathon
Guide
for
Women last
month after finishing Claire Kowalchik's book about running for women (you can read the review here). I wanted a running book with which I could better relate. I'm a super slow runner and didn't even make it onto any of the charts in Kowalchik's book, which was a little defeating for me. So when I read about Dais' book, which tracks her struggle through
training
for a marathon, while also giving great tips for people who have never really run before, or haven't run much at least.
I loved this book because I related so well with the things Dais talked about. She talked about feeling discouraged because every time she went out for a run she would end up right back where she started. She also describes her first trip to the running store where she learned about the importance of shoe fit, spandex and bodyglide (which I had never heard of until reading this book). She includes some great stretches, as well as a 20-week training schedule for both a marathon and a half marathon. She also leaves space for journaling, and for answering questions she poses, such as "Why are you running this marathon?" and "What was life like before you began training and after"?
An example before and after from her book:
Vitamins
Before: Do the rainbow of fruit flavors in Skittles count?
After: Pills the size of marshmallows washed down with one of my thirty-two gallons of water.
For me, the best part of this book were the personal journal entries from when Dais was training for her own marathon. Dais' perspective is so true to how I think most new runners feel that it's hard not to laugh out loud (I couldn't read this book in public because I kept snorting at her writing). Here's a sample:
"This weekend my little calendar o' runnin' said that I had to run sixteen miles. Is it me or is this number just
getting ridiculous
? Sixteen miles. What possible reason could one ever have for running sixteen miles? After about Mile 10, just call a cab and save
your
self a lot of effort. Hell, call me. I'll give you a lift. Believe me, it's just not worth it. One fun fact about sixteen miles - that's about how far away hell is. I know you'd think it'd be farther away, at least as far as Fresno. But you'd be wrong. Actually, I think I hit hell around mile 14, so it's an even shorter trip."
If you're new to running, or even if you've been running a long time, I highly suggest picking up Dais' book because it'll remind you of what it was like when you started and why you run. It'll also remind you that you're not the only one who suffers for running. If you are training for a marathon though, I suggest picking up some other books as well. Dais' book is great for moral support, but I think there are some others out there that would add a little more technical support, unless of course you have your own personal trainer.
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I thought it was a 5 star until....
I read the 10th spandex joke. Geez, the jokes were funny at first but by the time I made it not even halfway through the book they were SO annoying. She kept repeating the same things and about how much she HATES running. Enough already. I do not
get
the point of writing a running book if you hate running so much. I have run
marathons before
so I guess it is my fault for reading a non-runner's marathon book.
I just wanted something motivating to read. I did not realize she hated running though. I want to read Chipper Jen's journal. Now that would help me!
Yes, this book is definitely for beginner marathoners BUT definitely join a running group for
your marathon
training
. My training schedules were completely different than the one's in her book so I do not care for those either. Jumping from week 5 at 60 mins to week 6 at 90 minutes is almost a 3 mile jump. How can that be right? For a newbie no less?
If you join a marathon training group for the first time and read this book you will probably find many similarities and enjoy the book.
OR if you HATE running and are running a marathon (which is pure stupidity to me--why torture yourself if you do not like running????) this book would be perfect for you.
For seasoned marathoners you might find the jokes stupid and annoying after awhile..
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Dawn Dais hated running. And it didn't like her much, either. Her fitness routine consisted of avoiding the stairs in her own house, because who really has the energy to climb stairs? It was with this exercise philosophy firmly in place that she set
off
to complete a
marathon
.
The
Nonrunner
?s Marathon
Guide
for
Women
is a fun
training manual
for women who don't believe that running is their biological destiny but who dream of crossing the finish line nonetheless. It opens with a realistic training schedule and is chock-full of how-to's, quizzes, and funny observations, which Dais felt were lacking in the guides she had consulted.
The Nonrunner?s Marathon Guide for Women also integrates entries from Dias' journal, sharing everything would-be marathoners need to know about the gear, the blisters, the early morning workouts, the late-night carb binges, and ? most important of all ? the amazing rewards.
Anyone can do a marathon. This book just makes the experience a little more bearable and a lot more fun.
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