Shut Up and Run is another one of the books I kept seeing on display at all bookstores in Germany, and having (mostly) committed to running daily since early winter, I decided to give it a read to see what insights or information I could glean from it. Or perhaps more honestly: what motivation it might impart. And maybe even more honestly: if she perhaps had a secret that would make lacing up daily an easier task.
She did not. Alas.
But overall it was a fun and quick read, although I think reading it in translation (in German) made it a bit less fun, since a lot of the language just didn't translate well, although I at least appreciate the fact that in several instances, they didn't even attempted to translate her mantras and sayings (like: Shut up and run) and so just left the English in there.
The shortcoming of the book is that it is unclear who her audience actually is. As someone who already runs, most of the book didn't feel relevant. A lot of time was spent discussing why to run, and how to find shoes, and the idea of needing to drink water and stretch after a run - i.e. the basics. But then some pages suddenly were geared towards running ultra-marathons, with no transition between the two: You bought shoes? Great! Want to run 100 miles? Great! Shut up and just do it!
....
Uhm. No, no thank you.
But what I did like was her insistence on needing to know why you run (a deeper purpose than just to be fit), journaling about your running, and setting SMART-goals. And in the end, just needing to keep the commitments you make to yourself about running, no matter what.
So overall, not exactly a deep book, or one that one would ever need to reference after reading, but I did like her overall tone, which is summed up well by what she has her morning alarm clock remind her to do each morning: WAKE UP AND DO EPIC SHIT. ... I'll try.