three stars, rising four.
this book is a diamond in the rough.
THE VERACITY OF HIS CLAIMS
michael matthews does everything he can to present all of his hard-won knowledge of strength training in as straight-forward and transparent a manner as possible. he doesn't expect the reader to just trust him -- or his eighteen pack -- but takes great pains to illuminate the logical, experience-based, and/or data-driven routes to his conclusions, assertions, and opinions. his work is incredibly liberally sourced with cited studies. in this, matthews expects the reader to fully intellectually engage in the process of sorting through the junk science, the profiteers' claims, and the legitimate data themselves and stop blindly trusting the health claims out there.
THE RESULTS
while i have read the book and am more than intrigued, i have not yet implemented his strength-training program and so cannot speak to its efficacy personally. however, several family members have followed his program over the past year or so and have to a one been very pleased with the results. a female family member has been impressed with her strength gains particularly, and a male family member has had success adding lean mass while reducing fat. also, on a number of occasions family members have served me food prepared from matthews's Shredded Chef cookbook, and i've found the meals as tasty as any other recipes created for fitness enthusiasts looking to complement their exercise work with macro-specific eating plans (as a side note, this cookbook has been a fantastic resource for my brother, who has only very recently learned how to cook; he's found the recipes doable and tasty and nutritionally superb).
THE PLAN
i confess that, though i have logged a LOT of hours in a number of gyms over the past few years, the idea of structuring a strength-training plan from a book and figuring out form and practice in the gym by myself sounds really, really daunting. but i also know that it's the first few workout sessions that would offer the biggest challenge -- "wait. where is the weight clamp?" "which was the Romanian dead lift again?" "so . . . arms out or arms in?" "eff. i have NOIDEA what i'm doing." -- before the tharn-striking novelty would recede into comfortable familiarity (well, as "comfortable" as aggressive weight lifting would ever be!). so, i'm nervous thinking about implementing his program, but i definitely think it's doable. it'll just require some rereading (and drawn out and re–drawn out workout plans WITH DIAGRAMS!) before i'd feel comfortable venturing into the weight room with it.
strict adherence to matthews's plan calls for at least an hour spent three to five or even six (i believe) days a week in the gym. this variance offers a flexible enough level of commitment to be plausible for even some of the most insaneoid schedules.
matthews painstakingly explains the thinking behind his plan and walks the reader through all of the lifts, giving much attention to form and injury prevention. he then offers several base plans from which readers can formulate their own routines, depending on what area of the body they most wish to work on and what amount of time they wish to give the program. he additionally is quite specific about set/rep progression, speed of lifts, routine planning and reconfiguration, and supporting nutrition. i think he's offered MORE than enough material to empower the reader to start on or augment their strength-training program.
CAVEAT LECTOR: SPECIFIC FITNESS AIMS
matthews's program is explicitly formulated to help the user drop fatty mass and gain lean mass. while he is definitely a proponent of good cardiovascular health, his program is pretty explicitly at odds with endurance cardio training. in other words, if your fitness aims are presently fixed on endurance sports, my bet is that using matthews's strength-training program will definitely help you with body composition and strength gains, but you won't be seeing the same bulking as you would were you to do the lower levels of cardio he suggests to complement his program. so know what your fitness aims are going in and revise your expectations accordingly.
BONUS
matthews examines a number of nutritional supplements -- the claims, the nutritonal science, and the ingredient makeup-- offering his (data- and experience-driven) opinions on which are helpful, which are fraudulent, and which, if you only have a bit of money, are most worth the expenditure. he additionally suggests the equipment most necessary to creating a home gym -- from the most bare-bones budget gym to a more varsity setup for bigger budgets. additionally, he suggests alternate total-body workout plans for travel -- both hacking your hotel gym's paltry setup and using body weight to keep your strength gains up 'til you get get back home and to your own gym.
BOOK MECHANICS
it's pretty clear this is a self-published book. while the physical book binding is good, falling and staying open easily (important for in-gym, mid-routine reference), the text blocks are difficult to read -- the margins are too narrow and the kerning too cramped. also, a number of typos and convoluted passages force the reader to really fight for comprehension. and while the end of every chapter includes a bulleted reiteration of the material's most important conclusions, too often they're an almost-verbatim repetition of the chapter text, which becomes overwhelming instead of a helpful quick reference. also, this version of the book is specifically targeting women, edited from matthews's earlier-published Bigger, Leaner, Stronger, which generically assumed the reader was male (as does most of strength-training literature #boo). in a number of passages matthews's translation from male to female audience was clumsy or he forgot to edit entirely. this was jarring (from a comprehensive standpoint AND a feminist angle). again, a good editor could provide a strong assist, taking this valuable resource from "really good self-published book" to indespensible professional literature.
CONCLUSION
my rating remains middling because the getting there ain't always pretty (forcing the reader to fight against the occasionally muddled writing, typos, amateur typesetting). but i consider this a "rising four stars" review because matthews's methodology, conclusions, and how-to offer an exciting new resource to the fitness enthusiast intent on building lean mass. i will certainly be retaining this book for my own permanent library and figuring out how to incorporate matthews's findings into my own fitness regimen.