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Stronger

The Untold Story of Muscle in Our Lives

ebook
0 of 2 copies available
Wait time: About 4 weeks
0 of 2 copies available
Wait time: About 4 weeks
A groundbreaking, richly informative exploration of the central role of muscle in human life and health, Stronger sounds an urgent call for each of us to recognize muscle as “the vital, inextricable and effective partner of the soul.”

“Even if you’ve never picked up a weight—Stronger is for you.” —Arnold Schwarzenegger
Stronger tells a story of breathtaking scope, from the battlefields of the Trojan War in Homer’s Iliad, where muscles enter the scene of world literature; to the all-but-forgotten Victorian-era gyms on both sides of the Atlantic, where women build strength and muscle by lifting heavy weights; to a retirement home in Boston, where a young doctor makes the astonishing discovery that frail ninety-year-olds can experience the same relative gains of strength and muscle as thirty-year-olds if they lift weights.
 
These surprising tales play out against a background of clashing worldviews, an age-old competition between athletic trainers and medical doctors to define our understanding and experience of muscle. In this conflict, muscle got typecast: Simplistic binaries of brain versus brawn created a persistent prejudice against muscle, and against weight training, the type of exercise that best builds muscular strength and power. 
 
Stronger shows muscle and weight training in a whole new light. With warmth and humor, Michael Joseph Gross blends history and firsthand reporting in an inspiring narrative packed with practical information based on rigorous scientific studies from around the world. The research proves that weight training can help prevent or treat many chronic diseases and disabilities throughout the lifespan, including cardiovascular disease, cancer, type 2 diabetes, osteoarthritis, and depression. Stronger reveals how all of us, from elite powerlifters to people who have never played sports at all, can learn to lift weights in ways that yield life's ultimate prize: the ability to act upon the world in the ways that we wish.
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    • Kirkus

      January 1, 2025
      There's a good reason to stay strong, and, this book shows, it's not just to battle the bullies of the world. It's a pleasing surprise that much ofVanity Fair contributor Gross' book on muscles should center so closely on ancient Greek and Roman ideas of strength. In part that stems from the fact that one of his principal informants is "probably the only classics professor who is also a record-setting powerlifter" and, on top of that, probably the only classics professor who is also a professor of kinesiology. Charles Stocking benefited from a kind of boot camp run by an older brother, also a classicist, who interested him in the language Homer and other ancient authors use to describe strength, and not always in expected ways; as Gross writes ofThe Iliad, "When muscle appears on this poem's bloody battlefield, the material connotes little more than vulnerability--in the gore of dying bodies' open wounds." Amid the learned discussions of Greek athletics, in which bodily prowess was put to work in contests that paid homage to the gods, Gross also turns to somewhat more familiar territory: His notes, for example, on how humans lose muscle mass and strength as they age ought to inspire readers of a certain age to get off the couch and hit the barbells: "Conventional wisdom about muscle and aging had been wrong. With effort, older people could make the same relative gains of strength and muscle as younger people could make." Interlocutors such as Arnold Schwarzenegger enter the conversation, while Gross surveys all the many reasons that attending to muscles is in our best interests, not least because, according to a study he cites, lifting weights can reduce psychological depression--and who isn't just a little depressed these days? An engagingly learned look at the human body.

      COPYRIGHT(2025) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      February 1, 2025
      Skeletal muscle has many important functions, but most essentially, it moves us. In this wide-ranging tribute to muscle building, Gross touts the safety and usefulness of progressive resistance training (weightlifting) from youth through advanced old age. Some benefits of strength training include improved fitness, better bone density, enhanced mood, and a decreased risk of chronic diseases. A strong suit of the book is its consideration of the connotations, metaphors, and paradoxes of ""muscle."" Gross explores shifting views of strength and muscle in history, medicine, culture, and philosophy. Strongmen, classic sculpture, scientific findings, and sports, and a seminal 1940s physician, Dr. Thomas DeLorme, are discussed. Gross also profiles a professor of classics who lifts weights recreationally, a specialist in geriatric medicine who investigates resistance exercise therapy in the elderly, and a record-breaking female powerlifter. Gross movingly writes, ""Your ability to stand and go where you want to go--your independence, autonomy, and agency; your effectiveness in the world--will depend on muscle, to the last day of your life."" A convincing argument for appreciating and maintaining your muscles and health.

      COPYRIGHT(2025) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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