Born to run: a hidden tribe, superathletes, and the greatest race the world has never seen
Description
More Details
9780307279187
9781415963999
Subjects
Long-distance runners -- Mexico -- Copper Canyon Region
Long-distance runners -- United States -- Biography
Long-distance running -- Mexico -- Copper Canyon Region
Nonfiction
Running -- Mexico -- Copper Canyon Region
Running races -- Mexico -- Copper Canyon Region
Sociology
Sports & Recreations
Tarahumara Indians -- Mexico -- Copper Canyon Region
Travel
Also in this Series
Published Reviews
Booklist Review
From the depths of Mexico's Copper Canyon to the heights of the Leadville Trail 100 ultramarathon in Colorado, from the centuries-old running techniques of Mexico's Tarahumara tribe to a research lab at the University of Utah, author McDougall celebrates, in this engaging and picaresque account, humankind's innate love of running. There are rogues aplenty here, such the deadly narco-traffickers who roam Copper Canyon, but there are many more who inspire, such as the Tarahumara runners, who show the rest of the world the false limitations we place on human endurance. McDougall has served as an Associated Press war correspondent, is a contributing editor to Men's Health, and runs at his home in rural Pennsylvania, and he brings all of these experiences to bear in this slyly important, highly readable account.--Moores, Alan Copyright 2009 Booklist
Kirkus Book Review
A journalist's adventures in a secluded Mexican community of the best endurance athletes in the world. On an unrelated assignment, Men's Health contributing editor McDougall (Girl Trouble: The True Saga of Superstar Gloria Trevi, Her Svengali, and the Secret Teenage Sex Cult that Stunned the World, 2004) uncovered the legend of the Tarahumara Indians, a tribe of astonishingly fit runners concealed deep within the Copper Canyons of Mexico. Determined to learn their secrets, McDougall braved uncharted territory and encounters with lethal drug-smugglers in search of Caballo Blanco, one of the only outsiders to befriend the bashful natives. The colorful Caballo recounts an enthralling story involving the arduous Leadville ultra marathon and Rick Fisher, a greedy, hotheaded opportunist who bribed the Tarahumara out of hiding to compete. The exploited tribesmen participated in the grueling event three times before they disappeared back to their villages for good. An inspired Caballo followed the Tarahumara back to Mexico, where he ran the local trails and lived peacefully in isolation. His dream was to draw the top American contenders to this remote locale to lock horns with the clan in the ultimate endurance exhibition, and he wanted McDougall's help to make it happen. The author returned to the Copper Canyons with a handful of prominent distance champions, including Scott Jurek and Jenn Shelton, and the story culminates in a final 50-mile showdown. McDougall's background as a magazine writer is readily apparenthis prose is light and airy, informative without being pretentious. Most passages are short and engaging with extra doses of drama and exclamatory phrases thrown in to great effect. McDougall wisely grounds the narrative in his own struggle to engage in the concluding racehe was frustrated with his tendency to get injuredand he offers insightful sidebars on a variety of topics, from the development of the modern running shoe to an evolutionary argument that humans are literally "born to run." A terrific ride, recommended for any athlete. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Booklist Reviews
From the depths of Mexico's Copper Canyon to the heights of the Leadville Trail 100 ultramarathon in Colorado, from the centuries-old running techniques of Mexico's Tarahumara tribe to a research lab at the University of Utah, author McDougall celebrates, in this engaging and picaresque account, humankind's innate love of running. There are rogues aplenty here, such the deadly narco-traffickers who roam Copper Canyon, but there are many more who inspire, such as the Tarahumara runners, who show the rest of the world the false limitations we place on human endurance. McDougall has served as an Associated Press war correspondent, is a contributing editor to Men's Health, and runs at his home in rural Pennsylvania, and he brings all of these experiences to bear in this slyly important, highly readable account. Copyright 2009 Booklist Reviews.
Library Journal Reviews
McDougall writes for magazines where, if you don't keep readers riveted, they are apt to flick pages to get to the Kim Kardashian pictures. And BtR exemplifies beautifully the effect that kind of writer has: he keep readers interested. This energetically details McD's quest to find the Tarahumara, a renowned, secretive tribe of elite distance runners with "superhuman tolerance for pain and lechuguilla, a horrible homemade tequila brewed from rattlesnake corpses and cactus sap." Reading the book is probably not unlike running on the steep canyon trails native to the Tarahumra; it circles back on itself, twists, winds, and takes many, many tangents. Like about the Leadville 100 ultramarathon race or the mysterious power of chia seeds (now available in Obama and Hillary flavors!). Mac spends a lot of time describing the uniqueness and inhospitality of Mexico's Copper Canyons where the tribe lives, and its reluctance to race outside their own culture and instead remain intentionally segregated. It's part travelog, part gonzo-journo, part pro-barefoot running manifesto, part celebration of running. - Douglas Lord, "Books for Dudes", Booksmack! 7/7/11 (c) Copyright 2011. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.