I decided one day, maybe more out of boredom than anything more well intentioned, that it sure would be nice to start yoga. I wasn't seeking any of the spiritual woo-woo side of the practice -- I just wanted to feel a little strength and to embrace the shallowness that wants me to look more toned and smooth. So, yeah, why not yoga -right?
Of course I'm clueless about anything yoga beyond my old school Crunch Candlelit Yoga VHS from my middle school years, so I hit up the library for a book that might help me learn more about yoga, how to do it, and what type of class (or streaming video) might be best for my needs.
Honestly, everything I needed was really on the first two pages of this book, which showed a chart that broke down the degree of spirituality, strength, and athleticism involved in each various practice of yoga. I was able to eliminate the more spiritual, hippy-tastic, touchy-feely woo-woo type classes and narrow down to the ones that give the poses that made me feel strong and look sexy (in theory, at least).
That being said, I may not necessarily be the intended audience of this book. While I enjoyed the history of yoga in the United States leading up to the celebrity crazed body obsessed genre that yoga has become in 2018, I felt that some of the chapters on the individual schools of yoga were far too heavy and even repetitive. I didn't love that a couple of branches of yoga tied up huge chunks of the book while others were just a page or two, especially since it seemed to be the more spiritually oriented ones that comprised the bulk of the work - which are expressly the ones that don't particularly interest me at this time.
So, if your intentions are different than mine or if you attention span is greater than mine will probably ever be, you might get more than 3 stars of excellence out of this book. For me, I may end up purchasing the book at some point in the future, but it will be more for the initial chart of the different schools of yoga than for the book itself, which I doubt I'd ever reread beyond the first chapter or two, at least.