9781620402283-1620402289-Sweat: A History of Exercise

Sweat: A History of Exercise

ISBN-13: 9781620402283
ISBN-10: 1620402289
Author: Bill Hayes
Publication date: 2022
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Format: Hardcover 256 pages
FREE US shipping

Book details

ISBN-13: 9781620402283
ISBN-10: 1620402289
Author: Bill Hayes
Publication date: 2022
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Format: Hardcover 256 pages

Summary

Sweat: A History of Exercise (ISBN-13: 9781620402283 and ISBN-10: 1620402289), written by authors Bill Hayes, was published by Bloomsbury Publishing in 2022. With an overall rating of 4.2 stars, it's a notable title among other Stretching (Exercise & Fitness) books. You can easily purchase or rent Sweat: A History of Exercise (Hardcover) from BooksRun, along with many other new and used Stretching books and textbooks. And, if you're looking to sell your copy, our current buyback offer is $0.38.

Description

Product Description
From Insomniac City author Bill Hayes, "who can tackle just about any subject in book form, and make you glad he did" (SF Chronicle)-a cultural, scientific, literary, and personal history of exercise.Exercise is our modern obsession, and we have the fancy workout gear and fads from HIIT to spin classes to hot yoga to prove it. Exercise-a form of physical activity distinct from sports, play, or athletics-was an ancient obsession, too, but as a chapter in human history, it's been largely overlooked. In Sweat, Bill Hayes runs, jogs, swims, spins, walks, bikes, boxes, lifts, sweats, and downward-dogs his way through the origins of different forms of exercise, chronicling how they have evolved over time, dissecting the dynamics of human movement. Hippocrates, Plato, Galen, Susan B. Anthony, Jack LaLanne, and Jane Fonda, among many others, make appearances in Sweat, but chief among the historical figures is Girolamo Mercuriale, a Renaissance-era Italian physician who aimed singlehandedly to revive the ancient Greek “art of exercising” through his 1569 book De arte gymnastica. Though largely forgotten over the past five centuries, Mercuriale and his illustrated treatise were pioneering, and are brought back to life in the pages of Sweat. Hayes ties his own personal experience-and ours-to the cultural and scientific history of exercise, from ancient times to the present day, giving us a new way to understand its place in our lives in the 21st century.
Review
“Hayes entertainingly describes his adventures in the world of fitness, learning how to box at a pugilists' boot camp, swimming, running, and performing power yoga in a New York gym class. A brisk jaunt through the history of working out in Western civilization.” ―Booklist“At once a book about exercise history, and a travelogue, a literary discovery tour, and another of Hayes's personal and exhilarating memoirs.” ―Library Journal“Obsessed by both working out and its history, Hayes writes a book that combines them...An entertaining hodgepodge of autobiography, travelogue, and history.” ―Kirkus Reviews“With an introspective eye and dynamic prose, Hayes keeps his investigation grounded in his personal search for meaning.” ―Publishers Weekly“Bill Hayes' peripatetic inquiry into the history of exercise is a delight for anyone who loves a good search for a missing manuscript, as well as anyone who loves being 'so drenched in sweat as to feel amphibious.' And if those predilections happen to overlap for you, hang onto your Bosu ball-you're in for a treat. Hayes weaves his riveting findings in the archives with a revelatory memoir of physical exertion that begins to answer that most human of questions: what does the body mean?” ―Alison Bechdel“I was riveted by Sweat and its extraordinary tale of the ups and downs of exercise over millennia. Who knew?” ―Jane Fonda“Bill Hayes has an unusual set of skills . . . He is part science writer, part memoirist, part culture explainer.” ―The New York Times“Read just 50 pages, and you'll see easily enough how Hayes is [Oliver] Sacks's logical complement. Though possessed of different temperaments, both are alive to difference, variety, the possibilities of our rangy humanity; both are avid chroniclers of our species . . . Frank, beautiful, bewitching.” ―Jennifer Senior, the New York Times on INSOMNIAC CITY“Playful and powerful . . .profoundly moving . . . Hayes writes with so much panache that reading this book is thrilling.” ―The Boston Globe on FIVE QUARTS“[A] beguiling brew of fascinating scientific facts and illuminating, poignant anecdotes . . . vital and pulsing with energy.” ―Entertainment Weekly on FIVE QUARTS“This touching memoir of the late neurologist Oliver Sacks, by a photographer and writer with whom he fell in love near the end of his life, turns a story of death into a celebration.” ―The New Yorker on INSOMNIAC CITY“[Insomniac City] seems written in heightened states of feeling that infuse every de

Rate this book Rate this book

We would LOVE it if you could help us and other readers by reviewing the book