Ever see a gazelle with shinsplints?
I can’t remember the last time I enjoyed a book this much. I really had trouble putting it down. Part memoir, part sport journalism, and part investigation into human nature, *Born to Run* is well-paced, fun, and much more than I had expected.
McDougall’s writing style is a little more informal than I prefer, but he makes it work well. The subject matter is clearly very important to him and the personal tone lends authenticity to his storytelling and his theorizing.
In an odd way, *Born to Run* reminded me of *Moby Dick*. The narrative of Captain Ahab and the White Whale is only about a half of Melville’s epic. The rest is filled with background information about whaling, and ships, and about whales. *Born to Run* likewise had a central narrative, but spent quite a lot of time with lessons in history, biology, kinesiology, anatomy, marketing, culture, and even morality. Each seeming diversion adds to the overall picture and brings depth, weight, and relevance to the story.
*Born to Run* challenges the idea that running is an evolutionary aberration in humans and dispenses with the notion that our feet and knees are too delicate to run safely. Instead, McDougall lays out a very convincing case that the injuries that are far too common in modern runners are the result of well-meaning attempts to fix with technology what is not broken.
I’d seen some of these studies the book described before, so I didn’t think McDougall was coming out of left field, but he did a very good job of convincing me that modern running shoes cause more problems than they solve. Even Nike has bowed to this evidence by producing running shoes with less padding and less fancy technology to insulate the human foot from the road, in essence admitting that for the last few decades they have been selling us shoes that injured the vast majority of runners.
In the face of this, I’m suddenly very interested in getting minimalist shoes for running. I’m not willing to try barefooting it in an urban environment full of broken glass, needles, and lord only knows what else. I’m not certain either that I’m willing to go as far as to run in [Vibram Fivefingers](http://www.runblogger.com/2009/08/running-in-vibram-fivefingers-first.html) but I’m very interested in switching to a pair of [Nike Frees](http://www.runblogger.com/2009/05/nike-free-30-review-nikes-answer-to.html) as a first step at least.
I’m also not anticipating running the distances described in this book. 50 and 100 mile runs, if they ever will be in my range, won’t be in my range soon. I’m still working my way up to a 10K run. A few years without running has left me not so well equipped to run as I once was.
Nevertheless, reading about ultraendurance athletes is very inspiring. Getting information about how to become an injury-free endurance athlete along with the inspiration, all the more so. Being well entertained along the way? That’s more than I could ask for, but *Born to Run* delivered. Highly recommended.