Category Archives: book review

Book Review: Born to Run & A Running Update

While in India I read Born to Run: A Hidden Tribe, Superathletes, and the Greatest Race the World Has Ever Seen. The book has gotten a lot of attention for starting the barefoot running craze, and while I heard about it over a year ago I wasn’t very interested. Of course, when I finished Couch to 5K I had a lot more interest in running. And it was a great time to read the book, because I didn’t feel any sense of “Why can’t I run like that?” The answer was obvious, I can’t run like that because I’ve only been running for two months.

Of course, reading it in India was also an absolutely horrible idea because it made me want to run all the time. I would read and just feel my legs pulsing, wanting to run so much. The roads in India, at least where I was, were just not safe for running. It wasn’t even an option. So I lived through Christopher McDougall’s story and thought every day about how excited I was to run when I got back to Iowa.

So, back to the book for a bit. It’s the story of McDougall’s search for the Tarahumara Indians in Mexico’s Copper Canyons. This tribe is known for running hundreds of miles, barefoot, and never growing tired or getting injured. They are the ultimate superathletes. McDougall weaves this story into stories of ultramarathon runners in North America, whose stories are equally fascinating. What I loved about this book was that it separated running from a sport or chore we do to lose weight and running for joy. Running because that is what we are meant to do. We are drawn to do it.

There is also a lot of science behind running and McDougall writes about the anatomy of our feet in a way anyone can understand. And he really makes the case for barefoot running, mostly because as a runner he had a slew of foot problems and looked to barefoot as the solution.

I’m talking a lot about running, but there is more to this book. I think what I loved most about it was the writing style. It’s a nonfiction book, but the story and style almost reminded me of Jack Kerouac. I don’t think you have to like Jack Kerouac to like this book, and I doubt most people would even connect the two, but if you like stories about wild trips, crazy parties, and soul then you will love Born to Run. I think you’ll love it whether you’re a runner or not, and maybe by the end you’ll decide to run.

“You don’t stop running because you get old, you get old because you stop running.” 

So, I’ve been back from India for about a week and a half now and I’ve had three runs. The first one was tough, really tough, because I hadn’t run in about a month. I was afraid I’d have to start all over again, but I was happy to find that running is a lot like biking. You don’t really forget how to do it. That first run I could only go 23 minutes and a couple of miles. Part of the problem was when I first went out to run I was so excited to run. I probably ran faster than I should have and this contributed to me tiring out.

Two days later I went for a run and my goal was simply to run longer than I did the first time. I went for 27 minutes and felt pretty good. I wasn’t focusing on speed, just on getting the time in and overall it was pretty successful. Just last night I went for my third run and it was amazing.

Probably the best run I’ve ever been on.

No, it wasn’t fast. I averaged a little less than 11 minutes per mile. But it was consistent, and after about ten minutes of running my legs were just set in motion. It was almost like I couldn’t stop running. I ran for 33 minutes and for the first time ever, in my life, ran three miles. I felt amazing and when Jason asked me how I was I just grinned.

The thing about running is that it’s not something I was ever good at and it’s not something I ever thought I would do. So when I do it and I do well it’s the best feeling in the world. It makes me feel fearless–if I can do something I never thought I would do and have success at it, then what else could I do if I got over the mental hurdle of I can’t do this?

And that’s what’s really stuck with me from Born to Run. Running is all about mental hurdles. The truth is that all of us are able to run and the human body is capable of amazing things if you just allow yourself to believe. So when I’m running and I feel tired, I just go back to Born to Run and think about everything that book taught me about the human body and our minds. Instead of focusing on how tired I feel or I can’t do this, I think about that book and things seem within reach. There aren’t many books that can give you that feeling, which is why I think this is worth reading.

Book Review: Stardust

Title: Stardust
Author: Neil Gaiman
Acquired: Gift
Publisher: Harper Perennial
Published: 1999

I had this long list of books I wanted to read, but for some reason when I picked out a book to read on vacation all I could think about was Neil Gaiman’s Stardust. I wanted something a little more fantasy, which is something I don’t normally want. As soon as I cracked the spine I knew I made the right choice though–Neil Gaiman is a writer I’ve put off too long and I have a feeling several of his books will be in my hands over the next year.

Tristran Thorn lives in the land of Wall, right across the wall from Faerie and the two places could not be more different. Wall is a very normal place and Tristran has always been one of those normal people. But he decides he wants to win the heart of Victoria Forrester and the way he will do it is to go across the wall to Faerie and capture the falling star they saw together. If he does this then Victoria will marry him. What Tristran doesn’t know is what he’ll find out about himself when he ventures into Faerie, and how the experience will change him and his desires.

Often fairytales aren’t very surprising, but I have to see I was completely surprised by this ending and let out an audible gasp in the backseat of my parents’ car.

I think the main reason I often shy away from fantasy is the writing makes me so tired–does anyone else have this problem? I pick up the book and read a few pages and before I know it I’m fast asleep. It doesn’t help that most fantasy books are at least four hundred pages, so if I fall asleep every time I pick up the book I’ll start my own saga just trying to finish it. Stardust is very short, which I loved, and while the language it typically sleepy for the fantasy genre there were enough surprises to keep me reading. I’ll admit it though, it still made me a little tired.

You should read this if… you’re going to the mountains, the backdrop was the perfect reading for this book; you don’t normally read fantasy but want to give it a try; or you still haven’t tried Neil Gaiman.

Book Review: Daytripper

Title: Daytripper
Author/Artist: Fabio Moon & Gabriel Ba
Acquired: Purchased at Daydreams Comics, Iowa City
Publisher: Vertigo
Published: 2011

Just thinking about this book brings tears to my eyes. Not because it’s particularly sad, although it is, but simply because it is so beautiful. That might sound super corny but I honestly don’t care. This book is just… everything a book should be.

Seriously, shedding tears here people.

I always drone on about how important it is for the artwork to match the story in a graphic novel. This is a prime example of that, possibly even the best case I’ve ever seen of it. Just from the title Daytripper you’re probably imaging soft, colorful, for lack of a better term trippy drawing. And that is exactly what you’ll find in here. But the colors are different for each scene, each emotion. When things are horrible and angry they get sharper. When things are beautiful and happy they are clear but in a fuzzy way. It’s beautiful.

You’ve probably noticed I haven’t said much about the plot. Well that’s because I don’t want to ruin much for you. I’ll just tell you what I knew about this book going in. It’s about a Brazilian man who writes obituaries at a newspaper and at the end of the first chapter his own obituary appears. Then the story continues on as if he didn’t die at that moment.

Someone described this to me as a book about life with the mask of death and I think that is completely accurate. You know that old cliche, live every day as if it were your last. That is exactly what this book is, and it makes you want to live by that saying even when it seems impossible. It also turns you into a blubbering idiot over your lunch. Okay, maybe that just happened to me.

Read this book if… you are interested in seeing one of the best graphic novels I’ve ever read, you love life, you want to change your life. Seriously, just read it.

Book Review: The Unwritten: Tommy Taylor and the Bogus Identity

Title: The Unwritten: Tommy Taylor and the Bogus Identity
Authors: Mike Carey and Peter Gross
Acquired: Purchased new from Daydreams Comics
Publisher: Vertigo
Published: 2009
Rating: So good I forgot to eat.

Right now is a fabulous time to read The Unwritten. It is about Tommy Taylor, a man whose father wrote a series of books much like Harry Potter. Except the character in these books are based on Tommy Taylor himself. He grew up famous for being the character in the books and people cannot differentiate between him and the character. Except, things are happening around Tommy which suggest the life he had growing might not really be his real life–that he may, in fact, be the Tommy Taylor from the books.

This is a great comic for readers. It’s all about what might happen if stories were more than just words on the page, if writers actually scripted world events. Any reader will tell you how powerful stories really are, but The Unwritten pushes stories into powerfully dangerous territory. This storyline had me constantly shaking my head, wondering how they were going to pull off all the twists. It did not disappoint–I can’t wait to pick up the next volume.

The artwork took me a little while to get used to. The comic switches from a dreamy art style that represents what happens in the Tommy Taylor book series and a more classic comic style that represents the present in the story. I really liked the dreamy style of the books and could live with our without the classic comic style. Overall though I think the artwork does a great job of representing the story, which is the most important thing, so there isn’t too much to complain about.

Read this if… you love reading and believe in the power of stories, loved Fables (Bill Willingham did the intro to this), or are in denial over the end of Harry Potter.

Book Review: Embroideries

Title: Embroideries
Author/Artist: Marjane Satrapi
Translator from French by Anjali Singh
Acquired: Purchased from my local bookstore
Publisher: Pantheon
Published: 2005

In the midst of wedding planning I decided to read Embroideries by Marjane Satrapi in hopes of finding some good marriage advice. This is the third graphic memoir I’ve read by Satrapi and it was a real move from Persepolis and Chicken With Plums. Satrapi’s always had raw humor to her, but only in Embroideries is the humor sustained throughout the memoir. Satrapi approaches marriage with honesty and laughter, making the sometimes umcomfortable areas of marriage easy to smile at.

The whole story is Satrapi sitting in a room with her mother, grandmother, aunts and other female family members or neighbors discussing marriage. Satrapi is younger and doesn’t have much to give, she mostly observes the women around her. Sometimes she is wide-eyed at their admissions about sex, infidelity, and beauty. She discovers stories about the women around her and as the story goes on they become more and more outrageous. From a thirteen-year-old girl marrying a sixty-something man to a woman whose had three children but never seen a penis this book isn’t about “these poor women it Tehran” but about how women have secrets around the world, and that is a common thread tying us all together.

I didn’t like this as much as Persepolis or Chicken With Plums because it wasn’t as meaty, but it was a fun afternoon read and one I think any person would get something out of. I think men would be interested in the conversations women have, single women would be interested in what married women say about marriage, and couples would get a laugh out of the experiences of these women.

Read this if… you’ve read and loved Satrapi’s other work, you’re interested in stories about relationships and love, or you just like good graphic memoir.