Matt Fitzgerald is the author of numerous books on sports history and endurance sports. He has enjoyed unprecedented access to professional endurance athletes over the course of his career. His best-sellers include Racing Weight and Brain Training for Runners. He has also written extensively for Triathlete, Men's Fitness, Men's Health, Outside, Runner's World, Bicycling, Competitor, and countless other sports and fitness publications.
Some mixes and repetition. Book isn't strictly focused on cross-training but offers more than enough tidbits of information and guidance across the other subjects it touches to make it worthwhile. In essence, message is: cross-training is beneficial, illustrated with examples and complemented with practical exercises and training plans.
Good guide to cross-training for new and less-experienced runners. Helpful tips on alternative modes of training that can improve your overall fitness and, in turn, improve your running.
A mixed bag. As with all of Fitzgerald's work, clear and straightforward writing that's easy to read and digest. The strength and flexibility chapters are the meatiest and worthwhile; the strength material in Racing Weight is a refinement (and abridgement).
The chapter on endurance cross-training to improve running performance is sadly lacking: the structure of those workouts is not really discussed. It comes down to the usual "go light for active recovery or just do it for an endurance benefit". But when you're working in any discipline, the workouts should be structured towards a particular goal, and there's no help in figuring out a structure that best supports running.
B Good for those who need the basics of the importance of cross-training (which I don't); have a lot of terrific diagrams on stretches to do for certain muscle groups and tendons (I'm going to try some new ones). Recommended for any runner who is just running.
This book is now permanently in my spare bedroom (training room). The principles he's laid out here will be a part of my training routine for years to come.
A basic book on running and cross training. I guess you could find for roughly the same price all the material by reading some issues of a running magazine.