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46 oeuvres 849 utilisateurs 41 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Hal Higdon has contributed to Runner's World for longer than any other writer and is the author of more than 36 books. He has run 111 marathons and holds a personal best of 2:21:55. He ran in the Olympic Trials eight times and won four World Masters Championships. Higdon has served as training afficher plus consultant for the Chicago Marathon and Chicago Area Runners Association and also offers interactive training programs through Training Peaks. He lives in Long Beach, Indiana. afficher moins

Œuvres de Hal Higdon

The Indy 500: Thirty Days in May (1971) 16 exemplaires
The Union vs. Dr. Mudd (2008) 10 exemplaires
Fitness After Forty (1977) 10 exemplaires
Marathoners (1980) 10 exemplaires
The Electronic Olympics (1971) 9 exemplaires
Marathon: A Novel (2009) 8 exemplaires
The Duel (2010) 7 exemplaires
Finding the groove (1973) 6 exemplaires
On the Run from Dogs and People (1979) 6 exemplaires
Inside Pro Football (1970) 5 exemplaires
The last series (1974) 4 exemplaires
Beginner's Running Guide (1978) 4 exemplaires
Showdown at Daytona (1976) 3 exemplaires
Summer of triumph (1977) 3 exemplaires
The Business Healers (1970) 2 exemplaires
Heroes of the Olympics (2011) 2 exemplaires
Find the Key Man (1974) 1 exemplaire
Champions of the tennis court (1971) 1 exemplaire
Run, Dogs, Run! (2003) 1 exemplaire
The Boston Marathon 1 exemplaire
Through the Woods (2010) 1 exemplaire

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I read this in anticipation of going to a talk at the Newberry Library in which they are going to show how the trial would be different in today’s world.
This book was divided into three parts, the killing and investigation, the trial and after the trial. Clarence Darrow was their attorney and had them plead guilty so that they wouldn’t have to have a trial by jury. He focused on sentencing and to get them life instead of death.
 
Signalé
kayanelson | 1 autre critique | Mar 13, 2024 |
Cette critique a été écrite dans le cadre des Critiques en avant-première de LibraryThing.
One of the best beginner training guides on the half marathon distance. Ha makes training for your first event easy and approachable with well thought out schedules and explanations for how to get to race day and have a great time.
 
Signalé
ungarop | 8 autres critiques | Oct 3, 2022 |
A compendium of the best training advice written with humility. The nice part of this book is that it is free of dogma. [a:Hal Higdon|69749|Hal Higdon|http://d202m5krfqbpi5.cloudfront.net/authors/1314017977p2/69749.jpg] does not claim to have the definitive word on everything. Instead, he presents the best available advice (as of 1992), and states whether it has been shown to make a difference. He also points out some things best avoided, or at least approached cautiously.

The books starts out strong with meat in the second chapter. "Scientists don't entirely understand the reasons, but an efficient oxygen delivery system - aerobic base - is best developed by training within 70 to 85 percent of your maximum heart rate (MHR)." (Page 17) He covers the relationship between VO2 max and MRH in chapter 3, then recommends using MHR because "I believe MHR is easier to measure and put to use. (Page 23) "it's debatable whether or not we know the best way to modify VO2 max, but clearly, high-intensity activity is a key." (Page 27)

" - the mythical dotted line around 90 percent of maximum heart rate (MHR). If you run above that, say at 91 percent, lactic acid begins to accumulate in your muscles and inevitably causes you to crash. But just below that dotted line, say at 89 percent, and all sorts of marvelous things happen to your level of conditioning." (Page 136)

"How does this training compare with race pace? ... Dr. Owen Anderson identified 5K runners as racing at 95 to 100%... 10K at 90 to 92%; 15K & 10 mile at 86% of MHR, and marathoners at 80% of MHR." (Page 146) ... Aerobic Threshold training "is a semiquantitative way to have somebody run at a point where they are at a high level of aerobic training." (Page 146)


At about 200 pages, he gets right to the point, and makes it clear; emphasizing from time to time that rather than follow a formula or script, best results are most likely to be achieved by listening to your body.

It is a 20 year old book and with no pandering to fads, and no axe to grind, it is still sound, solid advice on how to Run Fast.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
bread2u | 1 autre critique | Jul 1, 2020 |
better than similar books with 3 levels of training plans
 
Signalé
Jeremy_Palmer | Jun 10, 2019 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
46
Membres
849
Popularité
#30,131
Évaluation
3.8
Critiques
41
ISBN
65
Langues
2

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