4.25 Stars
A great look at the human body's anatomy and which muscles get stretched during specific postures. This book is an invaluable tool for the yoga practitioner who wants to see inside their skin during their practice. If you are deterred by medical jargon and complex polysyllabic explanations then stay far away. Otherwise this book is wonderfully conceptualized and executed!
The book starts with a detailed and in depth look at human anatomy. With 40 full color pages of pictures of the human body. This section covers the muscular, skeletal, nervous, and respiratory systems with images and detailed labeled diagrams.
It then briefly goes over the history of yoga and basic principles of yoga practice. Exploring breath, the spine, using the body's levers and counter levers and basic posture modifications. This section is very well done despite its brevity. At about 20 pages there are some really cool pictures in this section.
The next 120 pages are centered around 30 common yoga postures. With beautiful full color pictures for each pose it goes over
1. Uses of the posture and physical benefits.
2. Basic modifications and how to use props for them if needed.
3. The do's and don'ts of each posture.
4. 3-4 small diagrams of the motions of the set up and getting into the posture. (With descriptions of verbal cues for getting into them).
5. A very in depth medical explanation of which muscles and body parts are at work. (I.e. Lenthening, contractions, internal and external rotation of body parts, etc.)
6. A full sized full color picture of the full pose that takes up a whole page. It has diagrams and labels for each muscle at work, and each label is color coded for whether it is a prime moving muscle or an antagonist muscle.
It wraps up with another shorter section on sequencing postures.
This book is perfect if you want something on hand to help you go very deep into the postures included. The descriptions are difficult and filled with the medical terms for each body part. This aids in the overall use of the book, but does add an extra layer to its use. Quads and hamstrings are easy, but iliopsoas and sartorius muscles are a bit harder, unless you're a doctor.
Glad I picked this up for $6 at a used book store, it will be at arms length for a while. Perfect to read on the bus to the yoga studio.