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Complete Idiot's Guide to Weight Training

Complete Idiot's Guide to Weight Training

List Price: $16.95
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Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Pumping Iron: The Smart Way!
Review: I have been lifting for a couple years on and off, predominantly by myself and with minimal instruction. After finishing the book, gaps in my weight lifting knowledge that I had not known existed had been filled in. The authors came across as humble, self-effacing, genuinely helpful, and very human. The expressed human element helped to convey that weight lifting can be beneficial for everyone. Looking through the table of contents, a prospective buyer might be surprised that the specific weight lifting exercises are covered in the last half of the book. However, the first half is well worth the price of the book by itself, in my opinion, as it explains the ins and outs of proper nutrition, stretching, gym and gym equipment selection, and gym culture. The authors goals of instilling good habits, good technique, and proper mindfulness in weight lifting is well served.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Great introduction/reference for weight training
Review: I'm glad I started with this book...it's well organized and very thorough. Covers all the essential things a person should know to get started in the weight room. It's also going to stay on my shelf for a long time as a reference, because it gives good tips on form, exercises, etc., as well as for other things that might pop up. you will probably want more info as you get more into training, but this book will continue to be of use as a reference.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Excellent books for weight training beginners.
Review: Loved to read this book. Covers all aspects of weight training without focusing on pure bodybuilding. Suitable for everyone who wants to get or keep in shape.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Excellent Way to Get Started
Review: This is the best book that I have found on weight training. I needed a thorough book to get started and this was it. Other than my very lackluster lifting durig high school I have never seriously lifted, so I am far from an expert on lifting. I must add however that after having looked at many books on weight training I feel like a bit of an expert on the literature. What I found was that most books are geared to those that already know the subject. These books assumed many techniques I did not know, implied that I needed to work out about 3 hours at a time for 8 days a week and rambled on and on and on.

The Idiot's Guide to Weight Training thoroughly introduced me to everything that I needed to get started. After reading this book, I walked into a fitness store, bought the starter equipment I needed and started to lift. As I write this I am bit sore from the first few lifting sesions, but I am excited and looking forward to the future weeks and months. This book helps with equipment, clothing, eating, stretching, excercise instructions, routines and safety. The authors have provided a very thorough, readable and motivating book. In my estimation this book is an extremely valuable addition to the topic, and is indeed as far as I can tell the best book available to the beginner.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Good Book for Beginners
Review: When I first read this book, I thought it was too broad in scope. A re-read has changed my mind. Here's what I think threw me the first time through: This book is written by athletes who have other sports as their prime activity. One is a cyclist, the other is a kayaker, and the third is a power-lifter/physical therapist. They're not bodybuilders, per se. They "weight train" to build strength for their other activities. They acknowledge the aesthetics and general fitness that weight training brings, but they keep coming back to their roots.   The reason I'm making a 180 on a recommendation for this book is because the advice is sound. All of it. That is SO hard to find in bodybuilding/weight lifting books. If you haven't discovered it yet, you'll find that bodybuilding is full of hype. This book is not like that.   Your motivation is your own, so use this book as a tool to attain either increased strength, better overall fitness, bodybuilding, or whatever. It's valuable as an adjunct to whatever else you're doing.


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