鈥楾is the season, once again, to rack your brains for the perfect gift for the endurance junkie in your life. You could, , pick up a pocket-sized 50,000-volt Taser in case anyone tries to steal one of your Strava KOMs (I鈥檓 reading between the lines here). Or you could stick to good old knowledge, inspiration, and vicarious adventure鈥攁 book, in other words.
This has been an unusual reading year for me. When my book, Endure, finally came out in February, it was like emerging from a multiyear literary hibernation. In the desperate struggle to finish it, I鈥檇 all but stopped reading for pleasure for most of the previous couple of years. So I鈥檝e been playing catch-up, plowing through a bunch of books I鈥檇 be meaning to read for ages. As a result, the list below is not a best-of-2018 list. Instead, it鈥檚 a pretty eclectic mix of books that I particularly enjoyed this year that also have some sort of connection with the general Sweat Science vibe, along with a few titles I鈥檓 still looking forward to tackling. Hopefully you鈥檒l find something that clicks for you or your loved ones.
鈥楾he Nature Fix鈥 by Florence Williams

I have one major criticism of this book, which is that it鈥檚 the book I鈥檇 hoped to write after Endure. It鈥檚 a look at (as the subtitle puts it) 鈥渨hy nature makes us happier, healthier, and more creative.鈥 And importantly, it鈥檚 firmly grounded in science, not just a bunch of people saying they really like trees. I鈥檝e been a big nature fan for a long time, but shifted my perspective about when, how, and why I should get outside. I read it in September, and within a week I鈥檇 bought a kayak to make it easier for me to get out onto the river near my house.
鈥楾he Hungry Brain鈥 by Stephan Guyenet

As a science journalist, to be totally honest, I鈥檝e gotten tired of the endless, cyclical, tribal debates about the causes of and solutions to obesity. And I鈥檓 going to resist saying something like 鈥淔inally, the book that answers all our questions and solves the obesity crisis once and for all!鈥 The nice thing is that Guyenet doesn鈥檛 make that claim either. Over the past decade, he has emerged as (to my mind) the clearest and most incisive commentator out there on the science of nutrition, but also the least prone to hype and oversimplification. is a fascinating exploration of current research on how our brains are wired to eat, and what that means for how we should think about food.
鈥極n Trails鈥 by Robert Moor

At the New York Marathon last month, I had a chance to catch up with my old roommate and mentor-in-the-arts-of-life, Gennady. He鈥檚 the one who introduced me to Leonard Cohen, the New York Times crossword, and 鈥淚t鈥檚 Always Sunny in Philadelphia.鈥 He had a copy of On Trails in his bag, so I picked one up as soon as I got home. I鈥檓 halfway through it now, and 鈥攄eep thoughts and fascinating science on the origins and meaning of trails, whether blazed by ants or Appalachian thru-hikers. 国产吃瓜黑料 ran an excerpt when it came out, so I probably should have known about it before鈥攂ut better late than never.
鈥楢lone Against the North鈥 by Adam Shoalts

Shoalts is a young Canadian explorer in old 鈥淎ge of Exploration鈥 mold. Of course, there aren鈥檛 any more continents to be discovered, and every inch of the globe has been mapped鈥攁t least from the air. But that鈥檚 not the same as 鈥済round truth,鈥 and much of revolves around Shoalts鈥檚 attempt to find and map a northern river that no one in recorded history has ever descended. He finally picks a target in the desolate Hudson Bay Lowlands, and his surprise plunge over an unmarked and unmapped 15-foot waterfall is one indication that he鈥檚 truly in virgin territory. Whether Shoalts is 鈥溾 or, , an anachronistic pseudo-imperialist trying to relive the glories of colonial conquest, is worth thinking carefully about. Either way, his insistence that the age of exploration isn鈥檛 over, along with the wild tales of his journey, had my trip-planning fires burning hot. (Shoalts also has a new book, A History of Canada in Ten Maps, that鈥檚 in the queue on my bookshelf.)
鈥楲et Your Mind Run鈥 by Deena Kastor

I鈥檝e written at length about the role of the mind in dictating the limits of endurance. But how do you actually put this idea into practice? While I鈥檓 strong on the theories, that鈥檚 not the same as living it. So it was interesting to read Kastor鈥檚 memoir (co-written with Michelle Hamilton), which in some sense is a book-length paean to the power of positive thinking. Let me be totally frank: Kastor鈥檚 thousand-watt positivity is the kind of thing I would have scoffed at for many years. Even now, it sometimes seems a little too pat. But then again, she has an Olympic medal鈥攁nd the research in my own book suggests that her faith in the power of the mind is well placed. If you鈥檙e exploring how your mindset can influence your performance, this is certainly to get the perspective of someone who has thought carefully about it鈥攁nd has been to the top of the mountain.
鈥業nto the Silence鈥 by Wade Davis

Speaking of mountains, I鈥檝e read a lot of Everest books over the years, but hadn鈥檛 read this one until a reader sent me an email about a piece I wrote about the 鈥渆ffort paradox.鈥 Why do people sometimes seek out challenges because of, rather than in spite of, their difficulty? George Mallory鈥檚 famous quote about Everest鈥斺淏ecause it鈥檚 there鈥濃攊sn鈥檛 a very satisfying answer, I wrote. Mallory鈥檚 actual motivations were much more complex, the reader pointed out, and were fascinatingly explored , which is an exhaustive account of the early British Everest expeditions of the 1920s. This book, more than any other I鈥檝e read on the topic, gave me a vivid 3D picture of what those expeditions were like and why they turned out the way they did.
鈥楽tring Theory鈥 by David Foster Wallace

of Wallace鈥檚 writing about tennis鈥攁nd, as it happens, another book I read after an email exchange with a reader, who saw parallels with some of the discussions in Endure. I鈥檇 read a few of the pieces before, but was glad I revisited them. Wallace鈥檚 insights about tennis, and more generally about the utterly peculiar inner world of competitive athletic endeavor, still resonate. And I learned some new words, which is always cool. On a semi-related note, another tennis-related title that鈥檚 in my queue after several recommendations is the 1974 classic The Inner Game of Tennis.
鈥楩ates and Furies鈥 by Lauren Groff

On the fiction side: a tweet from Des Linden put this one on my radar. It has some peripheral endurance connections, both in the plot and in the fact that Groff is the sister of Olympic triathlete Sarah True (and, consequently, the sister-in-law of 5,000-meter star Ben True). But that aside, the reason I鈥檓 recommending is that it kept me up later than I intended night after night for a week.
鈥楻unning is My Therapy鈥 by Scott Douglas

My top science-of-running pick for this year actually has little to do with setting PRs or understanding VO2max. Douglas, a former colleague of mine at Runner鈥檚 World, takes his own anhedonia鈥攁 diminished ability to feel pleasure鈥攁s a jumping off point to explore the links between running and mental health. I鈥檝e , so I won鈥檛 go into great detail here other than to say that there鈥檚 way more science here than I expected. for all runners, regardless of the current state of their mental health.
鈥楾he Power of Myth鈥 by Joseph Campbell

Campbell was the comparative mythologist who coined the phrase 鈥淔ollow your bliss鈥 and wrote about the that underlies myths from around the world (and which famously inspired George Lucas鈥檚 Star Wars). He was also one of the top half-milers in the world as a student at Columbia in the 1920s. In in the 1980s, he told Bill Moyers that his peak experiences in life had all come while running: 鈥淚 don鈥檛 think I鈥檝e ever done anything in my life as competently as I ran those two races. And those consequently were the experience of really being at my full and doing a perfect job.鈥 The Power of Myth is an edited transcript of those interviews, and is probably the most accessible entry point to Campbell鈥檚 work. If you鈥檙e trying to figure out the best way to follow your bliss (and who isn鈥檛?), this is an , and I think endurance athletes in particular will see their journeys reflected in Campbell鈥檚 thinking.
So that鈥檚 my somewhat idiosyncratic and not-very-timely personal top ten for the year. As a bonus, here are five 2018 titles currently on my shelf that I鈥檓 excited to tackle over the coming holidays:
- 聽by Kate Harris
- 聽by Jeff Bercovici
- 聽by Edward J. Larson
- 聽by Amby Burfoot
- 聽by Leonard Zaichkowsky and Daniel Peterson
And, finally, three highly anticipated 2019 titles to start getting excited about, all now available for pre-order:

鈥楪ood to Go: What the Athlete in All of Us Can Learn from the Strange Science of Recovery鈥 by Christie Aschwanden (Feb. 5, 2019)
As the steady stream of PR emails in my inbox attests, recovery is the great athletic obsession of our time. Aschwanden, the lead science writer for FiveThirtyEight, delves into the research underlying the hype, and emerges with important and practical conclusions. If you really want to understand Tom Brady鈥檚 famous 鈥渞ecovery pajamas,鈥 is the place to go.

鈥楾he Passion Paradox: A Guide to Going All In, Finding Success, and Discovering the Benefits of an Unbalanced Life鈥 by Brad Stulberg and Steve Magness (Mar. 19, 2019)
To find your passion, you must lose balance鈥斺渁nd that鈥檚 not always a bad thing,鈥 argues. Stulberg, 国产吃瓜黑料鈥檚 Do It Better columnist, and Magness, an elite running coach, reunite for this follow-up to their 2017 bestseller Peak Performance.

鈥楻ange: Why Generalists Triumph in a Specialized World鈥 by David Epstein (May 28, 2019)
Had Epstein鈥檚 next book after The Sports Gene been an extended meditation on paint-drying, I still would have pre-ordered six copies. Instead, it鈥檚 a rigorous challenge to the orthodox view that specialization is essential to developing expertise. 鈥淕eneralists often find their path late,鈥 blurb reads. 鈥淭hey're also more creative, more agile, and able to make connections their more specialized peers can't spy from deep in their hyperfocused trenches.鈥 As a guy who took up journalism for the first time in my late 20s, I鈥檓 psyched to read this one.
Happy holidays to all!
My new book, , with a foreword by Malcolm Gladwell, is now available. For more, join me on and , and sign up for the Sweat Science .