Two Hours: The Quest to Run the Impossible Marathon

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Description

WINNER OF THE CROSS SPORTS BOOK AWARD FOR NEW WRITER OF THE YEAR’Lyrical and passionate … a celebration of the human spirit and what it can achieve’ ObserverTwo hours to cover twenty-six miles and 385 yards. An exceptional feat of speed, mental strength and endurance. The sub-two-hour marathon is running’s Everest, a feat once seen as impossible for the human body. But now we have reached the mountaintop.In this spellbinding book Ed Caesar takes us into the world of the elite of the elite: the greatest marathoners on earth. Through the stories of these rich characters, and their troubled lives, he traces the history of the marathon as well as the science, physiology and psychology involved in running so fast, for so long. And he shows us why this most democratic of races retains its savage, enthralling appeal – why we are drawn to test ourselves to the limit.Now with a new afterword telling the inside story of how Eliud Kipchoge achieved the impossible, with exclusive access to Nike’s #Breaking2 project, and the Ineos159 event at which the barrier was finally broken.

Additional information

Weight 0.191 kg
Dimensions 1.7 × 12.9 × 19.8 cm
by

Format

Paperback

Language

Pages

272

Publisher

Year Published

2016-4-7

Imprint

Publication City/Country

London, United Kingdom

ISBN 10

0670921904

About The Author

Ed Caesar is forty years old. He lives in Manchester, and writes for the New Yorker. He has won eleven major journalism awards – including a British Press Award, PPA Writer of the Year and the 2014 Foreign Press Award for Journalist of the Year. His subjects have included conflict in central Africa, the world's longest tennis match, stolen art, money-laundering, and the trade in diamonds. His first book, Two Hours, won a Cross Sports Book Award in 2016.

Review Quote

Superb

Other text

Ed Caesar's treatment of the near-mythical two-hour marathon is both implacably scientific and wonderfully reverential. As a former marathoner I deeply appreciate both. The prose hums along effortlessly and the topic is one of the most profound there is: the absolute limits of human performance. Reading a book that combines those two things is one of the great pleasures in life