If you鈥檙e traveling this summer, my advice is (a) bring lots of books, and (b) keep them in your carry-on luggage. It鈥檚 crazy out there, but one way or another you鈥檒l get some time to read. Here are some of the titles I鈥檝e enjoyed so far this year, some new and some old, mostly aligned with the Sweat Science themes of science, endurance, fitness, and adventure.
鈥楽cientific Training for Endurance Athletes,鈥 by Philip Skiba

Skiba wears a bunch of hats, including sports medicine doctor and former consultant to Nike鈥檚 Breaking2 marathon project, but the label that fits best in this context is probably 鈥減erformance engineer.鈥 His particular expertise honed both as a coach and during his Ph.D. studies is modeling the body鈥檚 response to endurance training and racing using training load algorithms and the critical power model. As the title suggests, this book is a general treatise on how to train, with amusingly frank sections on a broad range of topics like nutrition and technological aids. But the real meat, and what distinguishes it from the numerous other training books out there, are the explanations of how to use algorithms to guide鈥攐r rather, engineer鈥攜our training and racing.
鈥楾he Sweet Spot,鈥 by Paul Bloom

This one doesn鈥檛 have 鈥渆ndurance athletes鈥 in the title, but its subtitle is 鈥淭he Pleasures of Suffering and the Search for Meaning鈥濃攕o yes, it鈥檚 talking to you, you marathon runner or cyclist or mountain climber or whatever. Bloom is a psychologist who recently moved from Yale to the University of Toronto, and the primary question he tackles here is: Why do we choose to do hard or unpleasant things, like watching horror movies and eating spicy food? The answers he comes up with aren鈥檛 simple (George Mallory鈥檚 鈥淏ecause it鈥檚 there鈥 as a justification for trying to climb Everest doesn鈥檛 cut it), but they鈥檙e thought-provoking鈥攁nd, for an endurance athlete, strangely reassuring. We鈥檙e not crazy after all.
鈥楬ow She Did It,鈥 by Molly Huddle and Sara Slattery

Mary Cain鈥檚 2019 revelations about how her promising track career was derailed by 鈥渁 system designed by and for men鈥 jumpstarted a long-overdue reckoning with the cultural, social, and physiological hurdles faced by young female runners. It also indirectly prompted this book by Huddle and Slattery, both of whom successfully translated early potential into long and productive pro careers鈥攖hough not without significant detours and challenges (as they discuss in this interview with 国产吃瓜黑料). The goal of the book is to collect the best advice from 50 other running legends across the decades, and to show that it鈥檚 possible for girls and women to have a long and fulfilling relationship with running. They don鈥檛 sugarcoat the challenges that still exist, but the result is an uplifting and optimistic read.
鈥楧o Hard Things,鈥 by Steve Magness

There鈥檚 a famous story about a horrific ten-day training camp that Texas A&M football coach Bear Bryant inflicted on his team back in 1954, which resulted in about 80 of 115 players quitting and supposedly planted the seeds for subsequent championship teams. This book, by a longtime elite track coach and performance guru, is an indictment of that brand of macho toughness-building鈥攏ot just because it鈥檚 demeaning, but because it doesn鈥檛 work. Instead, Magness lays out a roadmap to toughness that involves embracing reality, listening to your body, and finding meaning in discomfort. (国产吃瓜黑料 ran an excerpt of the book here.) Magness comes from the track world and still draws lots of anecdotes and observations from it, but in this book, he鈥檚 showing once again that he鈥檚 a perceptive thinker about performance in a much broader sense.
鈥楽even and a Half Lessons About the Brain,鈥 by Lisa Feldman Barrett

Feldman Barrett is a brain scientist known for some pretty heavy research on the neuroscience of emotion, which she described at length in a 2017 book. Seven and Half Lessons is a different beast. Here鈥檚 how she described it on Twitter shortly before its publication in 2020: 鈥淭he world has enough 400-page brain books; I wanted a neuroscience 鈥榖each read鈥 that鈥檚 readable in a few hours, makes you laugh a bit & leaves you feeling smarter.鈥 The result is, indeed, a surprisingly light read, though you can wade into the appendix as desired. Still, it had plenty of surprises for me on persistent myths (like the dichotomy between our ancient reptilian brains and modern centers of rationality) and evolving ideas in neuroscience (the brain as a network rather than a collection of specialized sub-regions; its origins as a prediction engine). And it gave me some ideas about topics where I might want to seek out those 400-page brain books (one of which was The Hidden Spring, by Mark Solms, on how predictive processing might lead to consciousness).
鈥楰indred,鈥 by Rebecca Wragg Sykes

Sometimes when you鈥檙e reading a book, you get the feeling that this is the definitive book on a topic. Whatever question pops into your mind, it turns out there鈥檚 a whole chapter on it, summing up the history, current status, and future prospects of research in the area. That鈥檚 the feeling you get from Sykes鈥檚 exhaustive reappraisal of Neanderthals, new in paperback a few weeks ago, which counters the long-entrenched clich茅 of a primitive sub-human species. The level of detail is really remarkable, and gave me the clearest picture I鈥檝e ever had of what life would have been like tens or hundreds of thousands of years ago.
鈥極n Quality,鈥 by Robert Pirsig

The single worst piece of academic work I ever turned in was a ninth-grade book report on Pirsig鈥檚 1974 classic Zen and Art of Motorcycle Maintenance. I completely and utterly failed to understand even the superficial narrative, much less the underlying philosophy. A few years ago, thanks to nudging from Brad Stulberg, I returned to the book. This time I got a lot more from it, but I still wouldn鈥檛 say it was easy reading. That鈥檚 why I appreciated On Quality, a posthumous selection of Pirsig鈥檚 writings, both unpublished and published, curated by his widow, Wendy Pirsig. (Robert Pirsig died in 2017.) The writings focus on the central concept in Pirsig鈥檚 books鈥攚hat he calls Quality鈥攁nd they鈥檙e artfully organized in a way that traces the development of the ideas and makes them much more accessible. Now I鈥檓 looking forward to tackling Zen one more time.
鈥楴erve,鈥 by Eva Holland

I thought I knew the roadmap for 鈥渟cience of X鈥 books, but Holland鈥檚 take on the science of fear is much more personal than I expected. It鈥檚 as much memoir as it is scientific exploration, and it packs a heftier emotional punch as a result (she鈥檚 gone through some stuff). That said, there鈥檚 plenty of interesting science here too, including some novel new approaches to dealing with fear that betray how much we still have to learn about the topic. Nerve came out in April 2020, when I (along with everyone else) was preoccupied with a new fear, but it鈥檚 worth circling back to check it out if you missed it. Here鈥檚 an excerpt that 国产吃瓜黑料 ran when it was published.
鈥楤arbarian Days,鈥 by William Finnegan

I鈥檝e surfed successfully for a grand total of about three and a half seconds in my life (and that鈥檚 being generous), but that didn鈥檛 stop me from enjoying Finnegan鈥檚 Pulitzer Prize-winning memoir about a life spent surfing. Journeys to mastery are interesting regardless of the specific skill being mastered, and there was a lot that felt familiar to me in his total immersion in a hidden subculture devoted to a seemingly meaningless pursuit. I mean, I guess it helps that surfing took him around the world to obscure and unfamiliar places where he encountered unusual people and hair-raising adventures, as opposed to devoting his decades to sitting in a dark room mastering origami. But it鈥檚 the inner journey that鈥檚 the real prize here.
鈥楢 Suitable Companion for the End of Your Life,鈥 by Robert McGill

Regan is an 18-year-old distance runner who hasn鈥檛 been able to run for three months thanks to a recalcitrant stress fracture. Sounds horrifying already, right? But things get significantly worse鈥攁nd weirder鈥攊n this dystopian novel. The action happens to take place during a pandemic, a plot point that was apparently decided before COVID, and pushes IKEA鈥檚 flatpacking concept to a surprising but somehow logical extreme. It鈥檚 suspenseful and funny, and McGill is a former national-class distance runner, so he gets the running parts right.
For more ideas, check out my holiday book list from last December. Whichever ones you choose, enjoy your summer reading!
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