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Яж и тичай

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Почти двайсет години Скот Юрек е сред водещите имена в жестокия свят на бягането на свръхдълги разстояния. През 1999 г. никому неизвестният Юрек става пръв на „Западните щати“ – състезание на 160 км в Сиера Невада, Калифорния. И го печели седем пъти подред, при това с рекордни резултати. Освен това той побеждава два пъти в състезанието „Бадуотър“ на 217 км, а неотдавна постави национален рекорд, като пробяга шест и половина маратонски дължини за 24 часа. Скот Юрек е един от елитните бегачи, които отиват в Мексико, за да се състезават с индианците тараумара – това събитие е описано в бестселъра „Родени да тичат“. Постиженията му са наистина изключителни, но още по-впечатляващото е, че докато покорява спортните върхове, той се храни само с растителна храна. В „Яж и тичай“ Скот Юрек говори за живота и кариерата си на елитен спортист и веган и вдъхновява всички бегачи – от начинаещи до звезди. Детството в Средния запад, ловът и риболовът, готвенето на месо и картофи за семейството, първите опити в бягането (Скот мразел да тича) и бавното преминаване към бягане на свръхдълги разстояния и веганство, състезанията по цял свят, рекордите – разказът на Скот разкрива как става каляването на желязната воля и разбива стереотипите относно храната, която осигурява оптимални постижения на спортистите. „Яж и тичай“ е пълна с невероятни, екстремни истории за издръжливостта и състезателния дух, изумителни научни факти и достъпни практични съвети, в това число и любимите вегански рецепти на Скот. Тази книга ще мотивира всички ни да „извървим пътя“, независимо дали това означава да започнем да тичаме, да открием нови кулинарни хоризонти, или просто да изследваме границите на собствените си възможности.

256 pages, Paperback

First published June 5, 2012

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About the author

Scott Jurek

11 books446 followers
SCOTT JUREK is a world-renowned ultramarathon champion who trains and races on a vegan diet. He has prominently appeared in two New York Times bestsellers, Born to Run and The 4-Hour Body, and has been featured on CNN and in the New York Times, USA Today, The Wall Street Journal, and numerous other media. Known and admired for his earth-conscious lifestyle, Scott is also a highly sought after motivational speaker, physical therapist, coach, and chef. He has delivered talks to numerous organizations, including Microsoft, Starbucks, and the esteemed Entertainment Gathering. He lives in Boulder.

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5 stars
12,557 (34%)
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3 stars
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Displaying 1 - 30 of 2,512 reviews
Profile Image for La Petite Américaine.
208 reviews1,497 followers
September 16, 2014
And now a summary of this book.

"I'm Scott Jurek. I am so great. I'm vegan. I'm Scott Jurek. I am so great. I'm vegan. I'm Scott Jurek. I am so great. I'm vegan. I'm Scott Jurek. I am so great. I'm vegan. I'm Scott Jurek. I am so great. I'm vegan. I'm Scott Jurek. I am so great. I'm vegan. I'm Scott Jurek. I am so great. I'm vegan."

Look. I like Scott Jurek. We all do. He's a great runner and he just seems like a really nice guy. But you'll need the willpower of an ultra marathoner to get through this one...and getting the to last page will probably feel like crossing the finish line in a 100-mile ultra, too.

Here's the thing. I don't really care about a book that's nothing more than an ongoing list of Jurek's trail-running triumphs, broken up by the occasionally interesting vegan recipe. And while I do buy into Jurek's plant-based diet thing, it's really not going to stand between me and my weekly cheeseburger. Though Jerker never gets too douchebaggy about his diet, he does get irritating. I mean, his whole claim that eating cows and chickens is bad because the animals are injected with hormones and antibiotics? Well, dude, you're probably right, but let's not forget that your prized vegetables are doused in pesticides ... unless they're organic, in which case they're fertilized with feces. *Yummay*.

And isn't it just such Western snobbery to refuse food and get all crampy about your diet? I mean, you don't see Kenyan running champion Samuel Wanjiru following a special diet. Oh wait, that's right, he got wasted and fell from a balcony to his death, so he actually doesn't give a fuck about his diet at all. Never mind. The point is, shut the fuck up, eat, and enjoy life.

The parts where the book momentarily borders on interesting are too few and far between. Example? His wife finally up and leaves him (perhaps because our fair Jurek was too busy training, racing, and winning) because she's in love with another man. Now, any non-moron knows who the guy is, but not only does Jurek frustratingly refuse to dish out the dirt, he doesn't even give us an inkling of emotion. Come on, Scottie! Call her a skank! Call her a cheating hooker and tell us how you went out and banged her best friend for revenge! Give us something we can USE for Chrissakes! But alas, no, it's only depression and more running.

Something like a narrative arc follows when Jurek talks about losing his mother and falling out with his best friend, but it's always the running, the running, the running. See, instead of telling us how he feels, we just learn that Jurek's bad mood leads him to lose races that he should have won. The moral of the story? Jurek comes to understand that winning isn't everything. Sigh. Fuck me.

Unlike my other reviews where I rip the book to shreds and take the author down with me, I actually *like* this author and wanted to like this book. It didn't happen. But I don't want my money back. Hey, That's a first.

Sucked. But Scott Jurek doesn't suck. Just hire a ghost writer next time, buddy.
Profile Image for Christina.
366 reviews12 followers
August 20, 2012
I couldn't decide at first whether to give this book a 2 for its self-absorbed, sticky-sweet, are-you-for-real passages or a 5 for the moments of comedy and enjoyment my kids and I had in reading those same passages to each other. I settled on a 3.

This guy can run. He can run long distances (100 miles, anyone?) and he can win at those distances. And I totally respect him for that. I just wish he could consistently describe those races without the grand-standing and self-congratulatory tone.

Other than some of the early chapters about Scott's life growing up with the extra responsibilities of the oldest son of a hard-nosed dad and a loving mother who develops MS and becomes more and more incapacitated, the book wasn't interesting or inspiring. I hate to say it, but I think Jurek thinks a lot more of himself than most people would, and that includes runners. His life just isn't that interesting and his victories seem a bit hollow because he just doesn't seem like a very likable person.

Scott obsesses about his diet endlessly and while I don't have many qualms about the diet itself, his obsession with eating seems extreme and bizarre, particularly as he cringes as he tells us about times when he accidentally consumed something as horrifying to his body as lard but then turns around in other passages and talks about all the beer he downs with friends. His comment on page 225 that eating has brought him "unmitigated joy" just seems weird. I can see finding enjoyment or even being proud of eating healthy, but unmitigated joy from eating?

He doesn't seem to have much balance in his life or very many strong human relationships other than the one he has with his mother. His wife gets barely a mention until she leaves him and he has no children, yet he gripes constantly about all the responsibility he's always taken upon himself as an adult, never allowing himself the freedom to be a hippie like all his friends. He fills his book full of platitudes about transcendence and joy, yet he doesn't seem to be doing anything meaningful other than testing his physical limits. It makes me wonder what he will do in the next twenty years as his body begins to age.

Some of the passages that I found particularly, um, interesting:

p. 74 "I'm a serious vegan. (I usually avoid that word; to many people it connotes a certain crabby, self-righteous zealousness.) And I'm a serious athlete. But I won't starve for my principles. Although I always have protein powder with me, there were a few times in Europe that I ate cheese out of desperation, and there were occasions in remote villages in Mexico when I consumed beans that I knew had been cooked in lard. I once took a snorkeling trip in Costa Rica and was assured that there would be a vegetarian option, but that turned out to be vegetables that had been grilled inside a giant fish! I was hungry and I had a race coming up, so I ate them. On the extremely rare occasions I've diverged from plant-based foods, it's always been a matter of survival, not because I craved animal products or felt incomplete without them."


p. 108-109 "I made smoothies, searched the farmer's markets and my local co-op for more fruits and vegetables. Even though I bought grains, beans and seeds in bulk and attended member appreciation night once a month at Madison Market Co-op so I could save an additional 10 percent, I was spending more than I ever had on food. And I was fairly deep in credit card debt . . . There are a lot of ways to live frugally. I know that better than anyone. But the fuel and medicine -- the food -- I put in my body was not the place to scrimp. My never-better vigor and well-being made the extra investment a no-brainer."

p. 195 "I wanted to be a dirt bag. I wanted to camp out, to drive where I wanted. I wanted to not worry about Leah, to not worry about making a living as a physical therapist and coach while building a career as an ultrarunner. I had been working since I was a kid. I wished I had taken some time for myself. I wanted to keep running, to live in the moment, to explore my limits -- but I wanted to do so with no obligations."
Profile Image for Scott Bischke.
Author 6 books38 followers
August 27, 2012
Read this book shortly after completing BORN TO RUN, being inspired by the latter and intrigued with ultra-marathoning, the ultra-marathoning life, and Scott Jurcek. Loved reading about his exploits in any of a hundred races, the crazy pain these folks put themselves through. And also greatly enjoyed the way the book talked of nutrition as the basis of his incredible physical feats. Only a tiny downgrade for some self aggrandizing, though given the premise of the book being reviewing his stellar running career, I suppose that might have just been inevitable. Tempted to give it a 4* because of that, but doggone the book really inspired me so I'll stay with the 5*s. And besides, all in all, Jurcek sounds like a solid guy with his head and his heart in the right place.
Profile Image for Martin Rowe.
Author 28 books65 followers
August 15, 2013
I'm a marathon runner and I'm a vegan, so I've a soft spot for Scott Jurek. I've seen him speak twice in person and he seems like a nice guy, and his memoir hasn't changed my opinion of him. He's made an enormous contribution to distance running, and shown that you can be a world champion on a vegan diet! He doesn't shy away from the "v" word, but he doesn't talk much about animal welfare (he initially became a vegan for health and environmental reasons).

I hadn't realized that Scott had grown up in such difficult circumstances. His family was not wealthy, his mother got multiple sclerosis very young, and his father was obviously not able to cope with it and lashed out at everyone. I would have liked to have heard more about the father, but the relationship has obviously broken down completely. Scott was a good boy, got great grades, and took to skiing and then running well. The book describes his runs and the challenges he faced in training and accomplishing his record-breaking feats. He's clearly very competitive and tough (it's clear that you have to be to weather the physical challenges of running 100+ mile races over forbidding terrain), but he's also a quester, humbled by the natural world, and in love with the brother- (and sister-) hood of ultramarathoners.

Thankfully, the book is free of the dudish, macho tone that marred Born to Run for me—a function of the fact that Scott clearly doesn't feel the need to puff his chest out over his achievements. Born to Run had more science than Eat and Run; Eat and Run has more recipes, and thankfully less of the tough-guy posturing that unfortunately seems to dominate the language of ultrarunning, in spite of the oft-stated quests for transcendence! Yes, Scott has an assholish friend called Dusty who seems to act as his alter ego and shadow side and spurs Scott onto greatness, but he doesn't overwhelm the book. I, for one, could have used less of the puking and bodily malfunctions (why are readers interested in this?) and more attempts to answer the rhetorical questions that litter Eat and Run: particularly, what these runners are trying to prove and what drives them on.
Profile Image for Elizabeth.
190 reviews1 follower
January 9, 2013
I was very disappointed in this book though maybe it is my own fault. I wanted to learn about ultras and was very curious about his diet but the book felt flat to me. Jurek seems very invested in this dual narrative that he is just an ordinary person who has a stronger will than everyone else and that he achieves because he lives so outside the mainstream.

He was awfully sneery about the modern lifestyle considering this lifestyle is what allows his to exist.

I enjoyed hearing about Dusty and then he was just gone. Either make him part of the story or don't.

I am sure we were all supposed to hate his wife but I couldn't help but think how much she must have invested in his career to have him be gone all the time and well it would have been interesting to read about that. Instead we got some lines about how she turned him vegetarian and then bam she doesn't think I am funny and loves some one else.

The best parts are the bits about racing and if you can get past the indulgent language it is well worth the read.
Profile Image for Donna.
4,125 reviews114 followers
January 11, 2018
This is nonfiction and an autobiography of Scott Jurek, an ultramarathon runner. I loved this. I had
no idea who he was; the running is what drew me in. He had a hard childhood that had him taking care of his mom and younger siblings. He grew up fast and learned to focus and succeed. He carried that over into his running. He was very impressionable and I like how certain events made such an impact in his life. I also liked how he was so determined to be the best and to do the best he could.

He mentioned the book Born to Run: A Hidden Tribe, Superathletes, and the Greatest Race the World Has Never Seen a few times and I remember reading that one awhile ago and I gave it 5 stars too. I am always impressed with those who can not only master something, but also be a positive example in the process.
Profile Image for Jon.
388 reviews
March 22, 2017
Jurek not only runs ultra marathons, he wins them--repeatedly. Does that mean he should write a book. Yes. Absolutely. Get it all out on paper, get it published, make some money. You earned it.

Now, do you want to read this? Let's do this old school:

[page 17]
You're jogging along in mile 42 in an ultramarathon and hobo standing on top of a cactus offers you a drink out of a caldron full of laundry. He has a chicken on his shoulder and points to a calendar floating in the air. On the 23rd of Fig Newton it reads "JUREK." That gets you thinking, "Does that have something to do with Scott Jurek? And isn't my birthday Fig Newton 7th?"

If you're one of Jurek's running buddies who wants to see if he mentioned you in print turn to page 50. If not, turn to page 23.


[page 23]
You see a tent and a giant pinata in the distance. Man! A pinata! And it's as big as a mountain! the lizard on your shoulder takes off his tiny hat, points at the tent with his cigarette, and says, "Buen cumplenos, my friend."

When you reach the tent, you're forcibly hydrated and the hallucinations stop. You drop out of the race. You're sort of happy, but you were really looking forward to that pinata, and miss your lizard buddy. You're still partially convinced that your birthday is the 9th of Fig Newton.

If you're an old friend of Jurek's who lost touch and the hallucinations were a reminder to read up on his life before you meet him for coffee next week, turn to page 50. If not, turn to page 51.

[Page 50]
Definitely read this book.

[page 51]
You're at home. You're reading a book. You're bored because it lacks an arc. There are vegan recipes jammed in there in case you get hungry while reading about someone you don't know who wins ultramarathons. The recipes might look good if you had an extra $300 a week to shop at Whole Foods and there weren't already a spoon sticking out of a tub of store brand cookie dough ice cream.

You might run, but you will never win an ultramarathon. You might meet a hobo with a chicken, but you will never meet Scott Jurek. You like vegetables, but will probably never be a vegan.

If you give up on the book, turn to page 107. If you read it to the end, turn to page 108...

[page 107]
You shrug, give up, and return the book to the library. You use the extra time to catch up on all those choose your own adventure books that you forgot existed. While you're entranced, you're eaten by a tiny lizard with a small hat and a big appetite. The end.

[page 108]
You shrug and return the book to the library. You're happy for Jurek for writing a book, but sad for yourself for reading it. A lizard known as Varanus tristensis ("sadness lizard") smells your sadness and eats you after you've fallen asleep. The end.
Profile Image for Sara .
1,507 reviews154 followers
April 27, 2015
A truly engaging and inspiring read. This was more than just a book on eating and running, this was a book on life. On living life free, fun and fast. On living life as kind and as open as you can while chasing the high of the run. Ultramarathoners are unique individuals and I am in awe of Scott's determination and perseverance to finish.

As a runner and a vegan myself, this spoke to me on those basic levels but this again was so much more. Scott's story from early childhood and his first race speaks of endurance, speaks of dedication and speaks of love for the sport of running. A sport that is most often used as punishment through other sports, Scott's dissection of nutrition and the edge where one can push the body before it breaks was breathtaking. The recounts of each race, each obstacle he overcame - injury, location, time, etc. - was told in the way of a seasoned story teller. This book did not read as a manual, or a condescending story of ones arrogance, this read simply as a story from one runner to another. I could imagine hearing tales of The Western States 100, Badwater, the beauty of Greece along the route of the Spartathlon and the time Scott met Dusty (one hell of a best friend and pacer, I want a Dusty of my own) while eating kick ass vegan food and sipping beer around a table. It's that kind of a book; a comfortable and yet informative story that was an easy read to get lost in.

I don't think I have read a book so dedicated to each and every word, hanging on and and looking up so much from one story as much as I did Eat and Run. This, was amazing and I am changed. As cliche as that may sound, this has changed me and I can't wait for my next run.
Profile Image for Corey.
170 reviews3 followers
March 4, 2013
The writing is very subpar, but the recipes have been really good so far. The lentil burgers are time-intensive but fantastic and you can make a ton of them at once and freeze them forever. They taste good not even cooked, just eat them raw or whatever.
The book itself is really strange, you can tell that there is a whole lot of information missing (like how we only hear about all of the "amaaaazing" runs he has where he wins the race, but we never hear about the races he doesn't finish). I remember my dad (himself an obsessive ultrarunner, although one who, despite his MANY MANY MANY unforgiveable faults as a person and human being, never dropped out of a race even when his hands would swell up to twice their size at mile 150 of a 200 mile race) complaining once about this guy (I never paid attention when he talked about runners because it was really annoying and I didn't care at all) who everybody thought was like god or something but that this guy would drop out of races where it didn't look like he was going to win...and now I'm pretty sure that this guy is Scott Jurek. I mean, he runs a lot of races, and he does win a lot and he is a fucking unreal runner (not being a runner myself, but spending my entire life up until college being immersed in the ultra world I have an awareness of the whole bizarre thing) but he seems to quit a lot, or at least not finish a lot. My thing, again, is that if he is such a mental hard ass and he does it for the pure joy of running and "sometimes you just have to do things" as he says ad nauseum throughout the book, why doesn't he finish all these races? But, you know, that's his choice and he must have his reasons. It's just weird to mold yourself as this ultimate competitor and then apparently not compete a lot if you aren't going to win. I don't know, though, maybe he's got other stuff going on and this is entirely inaccurate.
But you know who needs a book? Dusty Olson. That guy is interesting and doesn't seem to be hiding behind some persona that doesn't quite fit, which is how I feel about Scott Jurek after reading this.
Profile Image for C.E. G.
939 reviews38 followers
July 24, 2012
Reading this book is like getting stuck in a one-sided conversation with the most boring dude at the party. In this particular case, the offender is an ultra-marathoner who's discovered the miracles of a vegan diet. As much as I love veganism and running, turns out I can't stand the person who's most famous for living/promoting the two.

I'm actually too irritated about the time I wasted with this book to give it a lengthy review. I can't even make the vegan recipes in it because he uses such expensive ingredients.
Profile Image for Георги Колев.
19 reviews6 followers
October 2, 2022
Велика книга. Скот Юрек е... Абе възхищавам му се!!! Скоро не съм чел нещо толкова добро.
"Понякога просто трябва да направиш това, което се иска от теб."
Пак да кажа - ВЕЛИКА КНИГА!!!!
Profile Image for Jennifer Newell.
49 reviews3 followers
October 8, 2012
Before I read this book, I had never heard of Scott Jurek. I checked it out of the library based on an article I had read in a running magazine and thought the premise sounded interesting. And it was -- but the writing was not. The book did not flow well at all. While what Scott Jurek as accomplished as an ultramarathon runner is AMAZING, he doesn't know how to craft his rather rough childhood into an interesting and compelling story that could inspire others. He didn't touch on how he balanced his running career with work and family (although he would always reassure the reader that he run ten miles to work each way everyday). The book lacks any sort of deep personal reflection by the author.

I am training for my first full marathon and this is one of several running books I've read recently. But it was the only one that failed to move me in any sort of meaningful way. Still, I wish Scott Jurek the best in his future races. He is an extraordinary athlete and I am pleased to now be familiar with his career.
Profile Image for Krishna Kumaar.
32 reviews1 follower
September 12, 2016
Motivating book. How and why to set goals and how to overcome it inspite of the losses.

I have goal set now after reading this book. Better my half marathon pace by atleast 30s per mile.

Also I had plans to participate in stages ultras. After reading this, I decided they are not as challenging as single stage 50M+ races. It might be individual preference. However I think that makes sense and I am not going to do that. Qualify for Western states in next 2 years.

I was a weekday vegetarian and gave up because of shortage in options for protein intake. After reading this book, there are ways to overcome that if we spend some time and extra $$. I am going back to my weekday vegetarian routine.

I was worried about recalling the recipes. Author did not disappoint by having a section at the end :)

Thanks Scott and Steve for this wonderful book!
Profile Image for Katerina Charisi.
179 reviews61 followers
February 28, 2018
Αυτό το βιβλίο άργησα αρκετά για να το τελειώσω. Ο λόγος ήταν ότι δεν πρόκειται για κάποιο αφηγηματικό αριστούργημα (όπως του ΜακΝτούγκαλ ο οποίος ΚΕΝΤΑΕΙ), αλλά περισσότερο ένα βιβλίο προσωπικής εμβάθυνσης που διαβάζεται αργά και απλά, με μεγάλα διαλείμματα αφομοίωσης - όχι, δεν είναι καθόλου βαρύ, δύσκολο ή βαρετό. Όμως ακόμα κι αν δεν είσαι δρομέας βρίσκεις σχεδόν παντού τον εαυτό σου μέσα στις σελίδες του, αναζητώντας τα δικά σου γιατί.

Ο Σκοτ Τζούρεκ από μικρό παιδί βασανίζεται με τα γιατί του. Γιατί η μητέρα του να είναι τόσο σοβαρά άρρωστη και να πρέπει να τη βλέπει να αργοπεθαίνει, γιατί ο πατέρας του να είναι τόσο αυστηρός, απόμακρος και κρύος, γιατί να μην τον έχει δει ποτέ του να τρέχει, γιατί να χρειάζεται φαρμακευτική αγωγή για υψηλή πίεση από τα 15 του, γιατί να είναι τόσο αργός παρά τις καθημερινές, σκληρές προπονήσεις του, γιατί μερικά πράγματα πρέπει απλά να τα κάνεις χωρίς γιατί;

Όμως στην πορεία του άρχισε σιγά σιγά να βρίσκει κάποιες απαντήσεις. Όχι ολοκληρωμένες και όχι πάντα. Κάποιες απαντήσεις έρχονταν αποσπασματικά, σαν κομμάτια παζλ, σα μέρη από γρίφους. Κάποιες άλλες απαντήσεις πήραν πολλά χρόνια να φανερωθούν ολοκληρωτικά.

Το πάθος του για να ολοκληρωθεί ως άνθρωπος μέσα από όλα αυτά που τον εκφράζουν, τον οδηγούν κάθε φορά λιγάκι πιο μακριά. Η αφοσίωσή του στους στόχους του, η βαθιά πίστη στη δύναμη του σώματος να προσαρμόζεται, να αυτοθεραπεύεται, η συστηματική μελέτη της αξίας της διατροφής, είναι επιγραμματικά τα κύρια θέματα του βιβλίου.

Συνοδοιπόρος πάντα σε αυτό το μεγάλο ταξίδι του Τζούρεκ είναι ο «λαγός» του (κάτι αντίστοιχο με τα μουλάρια που αναφέρει ο ΜακΝτούγκαλ στο δικό του βιβλίο) και κολλητός του φίλος Ντάστι (θεούλης), τον οποίο νομίζω πως θα ακούω καθημερινά από δω και πέρα να φωνάζει: "Θέλεις επιτέλους να γίνεις κάποιος, Τζουτζούρεκ;; Κουνήσου, γαμώτο. Δεν πρόκειται να τερματίσεις ξαπλωμένος κατάχαμα."

Οι συνταγές του είναι πολύ ενδιαφέρουσες - αν και όπως τονίζει και ο ίδιος, η πραγματικά καλή διατροφή κοστίζει και μάλιστα ΠΟΛΥ, δεν ξέρω κατά πόσο θα μπορούσε ο οποιοσδήποτε να τις πραγματοποιήσει. Όμως με λίγο διάβασμα σίγουρα θα μπορούσε κάποιος να δοκιμάσει μερικές από αυτές με μικρές παραλλαγές. Ανάλογα το πόσο θέλει να πειραματιστεί και τι να πετύχει.

Επίσης υπάρχουν αρκετές προτάσεις για βιβλία - και κάποια από αυτά έχουν εκδοθεί και στην Ελλάδα, που σίγουρα θα ψάξω.

Προσωπικά πάντως βρήκα απαντήσεις και σε δικά μου γιατί - κι ένα από αυτά ήταν το γιατί ένας άνθρωπος σαν τον Τζούρεκ που μόλις έχει τερματίσει 160 βασανιστικά χιλιόμετρα, να θέλει να κατασκηνώσει στον τερματισμό και να χαιρετίσει όλους τους δρομείς αντί να εξαφανιστεί για να ξεκουραστεί:

«Για να βρίσκεσαι στην εκκίνηση ενός αγώνα 160 χιλιομέτρων έχεις υποστεί στερήσεις. Όλοι μας βρήκαμε τη δύναμη να πετύχουμε κάτι για το οποίο δεν είμαστε σίγουροι ότι θα πετύχει. Αυτό μπορεί να είναι το να τρέξεις 1600 μέτρα, 10 χιλιόμετρα, ή …160. Μπορεί να είναι αλλαγή καριέρας, να χάσεις 2μιση κιλά, ή να πεις σε κάποιον ότι τον αγαπάς.

Κανείς στους αγώνες (ακόμα κι εγώ) δεν είναι σίγουρος ότι θα κερδίσει. Πολλοί άνθρωποι δεν προσπαθούν ποτέ στη ζωή τους, πολλοί δεν κάνουν κάτι σημαντικό. Όμως όσοι βρίσκονται στην εκκίνηση, έχουν κάνει και τα δυο.

Με το να μένω στον τερματισμό και να τους χαιρετίζω, είναι φόρος τιμής στον πόνο και την αμφιβολία, την κόπωση και την απόγνωση που όλοι τους έχουν υπερνικήσει. Με το να μένω εκεί, αναγνωρίζω τη δύναμη που έχουν επιστρατεύσει και τους συγχαίρω που εστίασαν σε έναν τόσο μεγάλο στόχο και τον πέτυχαν.
Ανταποδίδω στο άθλημα που μου προσέφερε λόγο ύπαρξης.»

Ακόμα και το να βρεις τη δύναμη να πεις σε κάποιον ότι τον αγαπάς θέλει προσπάθεια …όταν το εννοείς πραγματικά. Τα λόγια βγαίνουν πολύ πιο εύκολα από μέσα μας όταν δεν τα εννοούμε στ’ αλήθεια.
Το να παλεύεις να χάσεις μόλις 2μιση κιλά, είναι κι αυτό μια σημαντική προσπάθεια! Καμιά φ��ρά το λιγοστό περιττό βάρος είναι και το πιο πεισματάρικο.

Να τρέξεις. Ας είναι 1600 μέτρα. Ας είναι και λιγότερο. Βγήκες κι έκανες το βήμα.

Να αλλάξεις δουλειά, στην αβεβαιότητα της κρίσης. Κάτι που για πολλούς μοιάζει με ρουλέτα.

Ναι, υπάρχουν άνθρωποι που δεν κάνουν τίποτα και δεν προσπαθούν. Όμως το να προσπαθείς και να είσαι μεγάλος δε σημαίνει μόνο ολυμπιακές επιδόσεις και κόντρα πτυχία στους τοίχους. Δε σημαίνει απαραίτητα να αλλάξεις τον κόσμο ολόκληρο.

Αρκεί που αλλάζεις τον δικό σου μικρόκοσμο προσπαθώντας να τον κάνεις καλύτερο, αρκεί που κάποιος βλέπει εσένα και παίρνει κουράγιο να συνεχίσει να προσπαθεί τον δικό του αγώνα.

Καμιά φορά οι αγώνες μας φαίνονται μάταιοι. Κι εκεί χρειάζεται ακόμα μεγαλύτερη προσπάθεια.
Ο Τζούρεκ με αυτά τα τόσο απλά και αφοπλιστικά ειλικρινή λόγια, μας λέει όσα λένε χιλιάδες ειδικών και μη ανά τον κόσμο, επιστήμονες, φιλόσοφοι, ροκάδες και αθεράπευτα ρομαντική: Ο άνθρωπος έχει ανάγκη από αγάπη και επιβεβαίωση.

Και αυτά τα δύο μαγικά συστατικά μπορούν να κάνουν θαύματα στους ανθρώπους.

Χαίρομαι πολύ που γνώρισα λίγο καλύτερα έναν όχι απλώς σπουδαίο υπεραθλητή, αλλά κι έναν σπουδαίο άνθρωπο που σίγουρα έχει διδάξει πολλά σε πολλούς ανθρώπους.

(Το ένα αστεράκι μείον πάει στην αφήγηση. Δεν είναι το δυνατό του σημείο αλλά who cares? Το βιβλίο είναι ένας μικρός θησαυρός. )
Profile Image for Michelle Curie.
864 reviews438 followers
April 1, 2020
"Running is what I do. Running is what I love. Running is – to a large extent – who I am."

Scott Jurek is a legend of sorts. The American ultra marathoner has won all sorts of races that involved running distances and amounts that seem incredible to most of us. In Born to Run, Jurek is spoken about with awe and respect – enough so to spark my curiosity.



Eat and Run is Jurek's love letter to running. In it, he retells how he started in first place and how he became the racer he is now known to be. One aspect I found particularly interesting was that Jurek has been on a vegan diet for decades now, despite people telling him that he wouldn't sustain his health and fitness without meat and diary. He was there to prove people wrong and is here now to end every chapter with a little recipe for nutritious vegan meals and snacks, which I thought was a very nice touch.

I'm an admirer of his spirit and athleticism, not so much of his writing skills. The first few chapters are clumsy to read and while later on there seems to be more of a flow and fluidity to his language, I was confused about the obvious product placements – the amounts of times he mentions Clif energy shots were close to obnoxious. It had me google said snack and left me disappointed when I saw that Jurek is indeed an ambassador of the brand.

The book won't really reveal anything surprising. I feel like most of the book's content can be guessed without having you read it – running can be great, sometimes hard, always rewarding. In terms of knowledge, there wasn't an incredibly amount of things I really gathered from it, despite me having a good time reading about the races Jurek took part in. If you're curious about the subject, this will be an easy and quick read, but if you're not... you're probably not missing out, either.
Profile Image for Maria.
241 reviews12 followers
March 28, 2013
20130327 ◊ I've been a fan of Scott Jurek for many years, so I was pretty excited when this book came out. It's a great story: well-written, courageous, very inspiring. My only issues with it were the descriptions of overt sexism present during some of his competitive runs. Honestly, that's the only reason why I didn't give this book five stars. As a female runner, listening to this book while out running, it was a huge slap in the face to hear some of the degrading insults offered up as "encouragement" to Scott by his pacer during some of his competitive events. Super disappointing.

The narrator read the audiobook with a more aggressive tone than I've heard Scott speak with, so that was a bit jarring -- however, that's a comment on the performance of the audiobook, not the authorship of the autobiography.

Funny side note: there's a section of vegan recipes at the end of the book, and the narrator reads them out loud for 45 minutes. I skipped listening to them -- hello tedious! However, I'm looking forward to checking them out with a paper copy from the library.
Profile Image for Alejandro Sanz.
15 reviews
April 16, 2023
Un buen libro de motivación, un paseo por la autobiografía y las vivencias de uno de los grandes. Si esperas aprender mucho de ultramaratones y técnicas de carrera este no es tu libro, pero si quieres conocer la vida y las reflexiones de uno de los mejores léelo (esta bien escrito y te engancha) Cuando acabe cada capítulo me dieron ganas de salir a correr y de comer más saludable.
Profile Image for Owen.
397 reviews
January 15, 2014
I had recently re-read Born to Run and I thought I give this book a try. I listened to it on CD and didn't like it as much as BTR.

First - Scott Jurek is an amazing athlete, no doubt about that. I wanted to like this book, but found it just okay. Yes, I am glad I read it. Yes, he is a great athlete. But there were things that bothered me.

You hear a lot about him getting hurt and continuing to run the last XX miles to win. This reinforces the notion that he is a great runner and could endure pain. No doubt - he runs ultras.

I didn't like the voice of the reader. It seems a bit boastful, and just didn't appeal to me. This is much different than in BTR - where the White Horse talks about running easy, light, smooth and fast. And the White Horse even drops out of his own race because he wants to see the finish.

Another thing - Scott Jurek talked about loving to demoralize a runner by passing him at a fast pace late in the rate. I'm sure this is him, but I would have admired him more if he didn't feel good because other runners were feeling bad / demoralized.

Lastly, I replayed a spot in the second half of the book a couple of times because I couldn't believe what I was hearing. What he said was something like this. Scott was saying that he had a hard life, having to work full time at age 15. Then he said he never had any time for himself. Hmm???? Running 100 - 200 miles in a week and you don't have time for yourself. You can try and make me feel sorry for you, but you had time to run so you had time for yourself.

Interesting book and an okay read. I guess I was wishing Scott was a different person.
Profile Image for Riannon.
285 reviews18 followers
October 16, 2013
I really could relate to Scott Jurek, when he wrote about running for the love of running, with childlike joy at the experience. I've never run an ultra, but have completed 2 full marathons and 16 halfs. The way he wrote about running was inspiring. I could almost imagine that I was running while reading this book, and I did run quite a few more miles than usual this week, which I attribute to this book. It was nice to get a few recipes as well, some of which I plan on trying out.

My only letdown was that I really wanted to know the answer to the "why" that he kept asking himself. Especially when he started backing off from running a bit and taking it easier. Why would he drive himself so hard, and why stop for a time? The only semi-answer that arose was the phrase that kept cropping up throughout the book, "Sometimes you just do things." I didn't find that entirely satisfactory, but I respect honesty and I suppose he can't really give us an answer that he doesn't have himself. My curiosity remains unsatisfied though.
Profile Image for Jonathan Maillet.
22 reviews14 followers
February 1, 2023
As a (mostly) plant-based athlete who’s beginning to dabble in feats of endurance and events alike, I thought this book really challenged the status quo of traditional sport nutrition. Scott is a prime example of why a plant-based diet is perfectly adequate, if not superior, for fueling the body to take on extraordinary feats of endurance and strength. Though educational, it must be noted that Scott does not have a background in nutrition - I thought there were a few misleading excerpts, especially when relating to protein metabolism.

With that said, I devoured this book. I thought it was a fun, motivating read. I loved the references to Christopher MacDougall’s ‘Born to Run’.
Profile Image for Vassilena.
284 reviews109 followers
July 29, 2018
Значи, Скот Юрек е много як, но 1) книгата за 100 страници не стана достатъчно интересна; 2) Юрек е твърде preachy на тема "Асамвеган". Първото беше причината, но второто е поводът да захвърля четивото на средата. На 140-160 км на седмица и бързо увеличаване на тренировките да ми обясняваш "свалих мазнини и направих мускули САМО заради веганската диета" е просто несериозно.
Profile Image for Katie Stanford.
15 reviews1 follower
May 16, 2023
I tore through this book. Loved hearing Scott’s voice on my runs as I listened to this one on audiobook. Really riveting questions and proposed answers as to “why” we run.
Profile Image for Ella Kasten.
80 reviews3 followers
August 26, 2023
Ev gave me this book years ago and told me it was epic and I just got around to reading it. Loved his journey to running and fueling his body. Excited to try out Jurek’s recipes and to run an ultra.
Profile Image for Amory Skaggs.
16 reviews9 followers
June 26, 2017
It's a classic memoir so you won't walk away with much new besides some good running tips and wfpb recipes. But the sheer determination and will to run an ultra over and over is quite inspiring.
Profile Image for Ion.
10 reviews7 followers
May 5, 2020
Interesante povestile traite de Scott Jurek. Nu inveti mare lucru din cartedar cu siguranta e absolut extraordinar sa alergi ultramaratoane de 50, 100, 261 de km.
Profile Image for Dmitri S.
178 reviews4 followers
September 15, 2022
Представьте себе биографию Нила Армстронга, в которой лишь малая часть текста посвящена его уникальному опыту и внутреннему росту, ведь вместо этого автор рассказывает вам о своих любимых веганских смузи и том, что если вы будете их пить, то тоже сможете попасть на Луну.

Скотт Джурек — великий спортсмен с настолько уникальным опытом, что стоит читать любой текст подписанный его именем. Скорее всего вам понравится. И тем не менее сложно не ожидать от текста куда большего: рассказы о реабилитации, практические советы, описания трасс (на которых 99% читателей не посчастливится побывать), выбор экипировки, расписание дня — всё то, о чем любой бегун заговорил бы со Скоттом при встрече. Но всего этого в тексте почти нет. Зато есть много рецептов и размышлений о веганстве.

Понравилось:
- структура: каждая глава привязана к очередному важному забегу в жизни Джурека, что отлично передает «марафоноцентричность» его Вселенной;
- абстрактные мысли о философии и красоте бега и одиночества;

Не понравилось:
- логический стержень книги: всю первую часть текста Джурек объясняет каждый свой успех не столько совокупностью генетической предрасположенности и воли, сколько невероятными свойствами растительного питания. Но когда травмы и пренебрежение реабилитацией всё-таки «догоняют» Скотта, а в его карьере начинается спад — он почему-то не объясняет почему натуральное волшебное питание не разрешило проблему в этот раз;
- легкость, с которой генетически предрасположенный к бегу человек рассказывает о том, что надо просто превозмочь боль и закончить дистанцию с галлюцинациями, порванными связками или опухшим голеностопом. Если вы планируете отнестись к этому тексту чуть более серьезно чем к фикшену (а иначе зачем это читать?) — обязательно убедитесь в наличии хорошей медицинской страховки.

Ближе к концу книги Джурек задается вопросом: «Получили ли они свои силы и волю через гены, благодаря удачному стечению обстоятельств или же выработали их в течение тренировок? Можно ли вырастить элитного спортсмена или им нужно родиться?» — и не дает ответ ни на один из них.

И не смотря на это «Ешь правильно, беги быстро» — хорошее и интересное чтение.
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