I was hoping this book wouldn't be too out-of-date even though it was published in 1995, I think, since there weren't many options at the library. Well, it IS. She is a great runner, I'm sure, but she has had more injuries than average due to overtraining, and though she uses that as a warning, you can tell she doesn't really do what she's supposed to. And she talks about how she had to wear mens shoes because they didn't have good running shoes for women. She spent a lot of time telling her own personal running preferences (10-20 miles in the morning then her hours in the afternoon training) and her own average times, etc. It would be fine if it was meant to inspire, it wasn't exactly bragging, but it seemed more appropriate for a Joan Samuelson memoir than a Running for Women handbook. She didn't run with a bra and she doesn't talk much about any mechanics of running as a woman that might be different than a man, the main womanly info was how she ran a marathon on the first day of her period and just pinned an extra tampon inside her running clothes. This book had a few helpful bits of advice, but I'm sure that's only because it's the first running book I've ever read. I've just started on another (Running for Mortals) and it's MUCH more helpful as an instruction book, even for women! I'm still waiting to get my Chi Running book from Amazon.