Rating: Summary: ANOTHER FITNESS CLASSIC! Review: ..............Once again Covert Bailey has captured the essence of fitness training, nutrition, and common sense. It's very refreshing to read this wonderful author's work and have him share his great ideas. He recommends fitness activities that are easy on the body and that are fun to follow.. May I encourage you to be the best that you can be by following this program that Covert Bailey has put together to help us. Thanks for the job well done, Covert!
Rating: Summary: Ultimate Fit or Fat Review: Covert Bailey has finished off his Fit Or Fat series with The Ultimate Fit or Fat. This small book, only $11, quite adequately summarizes what you need know to achieve fitness and escape fatness, Bailey's quest for over 20 years now. Covert has always been keen on the physiology of fat burning, especially in the role of fat-burning enzymes. He covers these in more detail in some of his earlier works but summarizes by advising that aerobic exercise should be "gentle enough so that the muscle burns fat rather than sugar," but "hard enough to stimulate the growth of new fat-burning enzymes. The basic enhancement of fat burning enzymes takes place during and after exercise, as they replenish muscle tissue's stores of glycogen, sugar ready to be used. He reminds us that when we exercise aerobically, such as in fast walking, we best stimulate fat burning enzymes and with them, fat loss. But he also again makes the point that even better conditioning and fat burning may be accomplished with wind sprints, simple sub-minute bursts of greater exertion. Wind sprints are defined as short bursts of more intense activity, such as jogging for a walker or actually sprinting for a runner. He notes that it is in the recovery phase of these sprints where the most fat burning actually takes place. Please check the actual book for guidelines, as these can be important depending on your age and condition before pushing up your intensity. Nutrition, a topic vital to weight control, is little covered in this book and addressed better in earlier works, such as Fit or Fat Target Diet. He does admonish readers to stop "putting grease on top of your food." He focuses here instead on upping your metabolism with aerobic activity, wind sprints, weight training and cross conditioning. The book presents a complete set of weight lifting routines using your own body weight to provide resistance. He offers ways to calculate approximate body fat and determine heart rate for safe and effective exercise. Covert Bailey converts your pace for covering a mile with moderate exertion into an interesting metric of your general health. He quite correctly shows how your ability to cover a mile in say, 12 minutes or nine minutes does give a strong indicator of your general health and well-being, physical condition, and body fat. As a side benefit, his focus on pace and the benefits of wind sprints can quickly lead one to move a bit faster during daily exercise. All in all, this is an excellent volume for anyone plagued by overweight. Especially at a time when book stores are overflowing with questionable best sellers on food types and overweight, Covert Bailey's basic and well-stated grounding on our daily activities and fitness being the real cures of fatness have a renewed importance.
Rating: Summary: His heart's in the right place but some wrong information Review: Covert Bailey remains a strong proponent of the fitness-health connection, and is an entertaining writer. Overall this book is pretty good. There are several pieces of misinformation though: 1. He makes the common "low intensity exercise" mistake of depicting fat-burning vs sugar-burning as a black and white issue. At higher exercise intensity levels, you don't suddenly switch to burning sugar instead of fat, you just burn a higher percentage of calories from sugar. But since you are also burning more total calories, you'll burn more fat than when exercising at lower intensities, AND burn more sugar. Further, higher intensity exercise leaves the metabolism higher so continues to burn calories after exercise (he mentioned this effect for weight lifting but missed it for other types of anaerobic exercise). 2. In addition to his incorrect prejudice against swimming (mentioned by another reviewer), he also incorrectly states that bicycling burns little fat. At slow speeds bicycling is comparable to walking in rate of calorie (and fat) burning, at higher speeds it is comparable to running. Just check any of the calorie calculators on the web to confirm this. 3. I think he is still missing one of the main points of the value of weight lifting, which is to reverse the continual muscle loss that occurs with aging in sedentary people.
Rating: Summary: A Common Sense approach Review: Covert Bailey's approach is something anyone can handle. The key point is to just do it. He explains that staying in your target fat burning range is much more important and beneficial than going all out. I have always thought that the fat burn range on the tread mill was for sissies and consequently have over done it on more than one occasion. Exercise became something to dread because I thought it had to hurt to be good for me. Bailey's book explains in detail the reasons for working out in your target heart rate/fat burn range. It takes the pressure off trying to always go for the gold and leaves you feeling good for just getting out there.
Rating: Summary: Good Common Sense Book Review: Easy reading and down to earth explanation of how your body works through aerobic and anaerobic exercises. Does a good job explaining that you don't have to "kill" yourself to stay in shape and be healthy.
Rating: Summary: Not bad, but some questionable information Review: I liked this book overall, and I'm glad Baily added information on weight lifting which he ignored in earlier versions of Fit or Fat. He's way behind the curve here. Fitness pros have been touting weight lifting for a decade as the ultimate way to burn fat I disagree with his emphasis on running to lose weight and it's too bad he remains so prejudiced against swimming as a fat-burning exercise because it's virtually injury-free, burns lots of calories and is excellent for muscle toning. His little story about why a seal floats and a fox doesn't is silly - no one swims in the kind of subarctic freezing water that encourages the body to retain fat. Studies show that swimming does indeed burn fat, and all the swimmers I know are very thin, fit people. While it may not burn as many calories as running, it's a lot easier on the joints and therefore easier to stick with. I did enjoy his book, although I don't consider him the ultimate fitness guru he's hyped up to be.
Rating: Summary: New Info! Review: It would be nice to love this book. True, the author has finally figured out that weighlifting is vital for long term physical fitness. Unfortunately, the program he recommends won't do the trick. And, as in previous books, he makes some statements of fact that are not only totally wrong, but so wrong that even a modicum of research could have kept him from making them. For example, he states that recovery time in weighlifting is well defined: it is 48 hours. This is one of the most important controversies among bodybuilders today, yet Bailey offers an answer that neither the volume camp nor the high intensity camp would accept. And what is the research behind this statement? It is never mentioned. Probably because it does not exist. So, while there have been some improvements, especially in the aerobics section, of previous Fit or Fat books, these are still pretty weak choices as fitness guides. I have mixed feelings about this sort of thing. It is great that the books have a wide audience and some of the ideas may be new to those who have been on the Soviet Mir for a few years. But the flippant writing style and the playing fast and loose with facts puts this book in the "not recommended" list.
Rating: Summary: New Info! Review: Thanks again Covert! I was wary of purchasing this book as I've read Covert Bailey's original "Fit or Fat" and doubted that there was anything new to say on the subject. However, a friend convinced me to give it a try and I'm glad that I did. Valuable new information on wind sprints (not as strenuous as it sounds!) is included in this new book. I've incorporated sprints into my work out and have seen a dramatic jump in my fitness level. That alone was worth the price of the volume. Covert includes an easy formula to determine an accurate body fat measurement using a tape measure - just in case you don't appreciate spending $80 to be dunked in a tank of water or pinched with calipers. There's also an easy introduction to weight lifting that you can do at home without purchasing any expensive equipment. Even though I try to get to the gym a couple times a week to do weights, there are days when it "just doesn't happen". I use this beginning program as my fall back plan. I just up the reps and I can get in some weightlifting exercise in my hotel room when I'm on business travel. This book is intended for average folks that know they should be getting some exercise but have difficulty getting physical fitness into their daily routine. It's motivating, complete unto itself, and will explain in very clear and easy terms how to get the most physical benefit from your precious exercise time. (This applies to 90% of us.) This book is NOT intended for gym dogs or athletes in training that have already established an intense exercise program. That 10% of the populaton is training at a much higher level and already knows this stuff.
Rating: Summary: Very readable, helpful guide to burning fat through exercise Review: This is a highly readable guidebook to burning fat through exercise. Bailey uses just enough science to back up his suggestions, but not so much that an unscientific minded reader (such as myself) gets bogged down. Bailey is very adamant that burning fat comes through exercise, and that trying to burn (lose) fat through diet alone is not nearly as effective. The best fat-burning combination includes 4 components: aerobic exercise, cross-training, weight training, and sprints. Bailey does a great job of explaining how each of these exercise components works to help retrain the body and muscles to burn fat. There are very helpful tables and graphs throughout the book. My one disappointment with this book concerns his formula to measure percent body fat. Although he claims this formula is "nearly" as precise as expensive medical alternatives (especially floatation methods), it has a 2 percent margin of error. That means your final calculation is correct *plus or minus 2 percent.* That means you have a range of 4 percentage points. That does not sound very precise or helpful to me. Nonetheless, I found the book overall to be very instructive, and it will help me design my exercise workouts for no doubt much better fat burning results.
Rating: Summary: very practical and understandable Review: Ultimate Fit and Fat is an easy and quick read. Just as he did in his earlier book Smart Exercise, Bailey discusses the importance of exercising over dieting in improving and maintaining one's fitness. The recommendations that he makes regarding exercise are practical and easy to implement. I would strongly recommend this book to people who would like to improve their fitness AND understand the process of improving their health.
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