****.5
Grete Waitz is one of my childhood heroes. She ran the NYC marathon like my father, and was a schoolteacher like my mother. A phenomenal record-setting athlete, but humble and generous and gracious. A true champion. None of which means that her book for beginners will be any good of course, so I was prepared to be disappointed. A lot of elite athletes are so far removed from what normal people experience that they tend to not have anything relatable or relevant to say. Or they've done nothing but eat, run, and sleep for 20 years straight and are left devoid of personality altogether, which makes for a dry reading experience.
Thankfully neither is the case here. Despite being the fastest in the world, her transition from track to road was far from seamless, and she didn't sequester herself from the common riffraff. Instead, she spent years expanding the reach of the sport, and this book is the culmination of all that experience, both as a runner and as a teacher.
There are certainly books with more elaborate training plans, incorporating various types of training and lots of technical details and formulae for calculating various thresholds and paces. But as the title proclaims, this is a book for beginners. It does not downplay the importance of vigorous dedicated training, but strips out the advanced techniques and provides a clear path for not just a successful completion, but an enjoyable and rewarding process that will hopefully lead to a lifelong love of distance running.
Note: I read the second edition (from 2010), I think there is a more recent version from 2015 published posthumously which might be a bit more up to date depending on what they changed, but this is the one I managed to find.