Official Review: Dolphins Don’t Run Marathons
The book is written in an encouraging tone with simplistic language. The author’s goal is to help human ants escape from the runner’s mentality and begin to enjoy life outside of the confines of long-distance running. Brand conveys his message with short chapters imbued with his personal experiences, feelings, and advice. For anyone familiar with the marathon world, or the exercise industry in general, this book will be extremely easy to relate to. As I read Brand’s story, I quickly identified symptoms from my own exercise-crazed past.
However, there is something off about this book. The absence of a specific category makes it difficult to determine the main point:
The most disappointing aspect of the book was the lack of development of the categorization of humans as ants, chimpanzees, and dolphins. A brief description of each type of human is provided at the beginning, but only slight connections between the psychological aspects of exercise and obsession and the correlation between each of the categories are made; the hypothesis is never fully developed. Moreover, the organization of the book is strange. There are big gaps in spacing between paragraphs, and the conciseness of some chapters made them seem like hollow add-ons so the author could reach the intended 26.2 chapters.
Overall, I was unsure how to rate this book. Since I found the content relatable, the writing engaging, and the categorization of humans amusing, I didn’t want to go with a low rating. However, the lack of helpful advice and the underdevelopment of the main hypothesis left me feeling unsatisfied. Therefore,
******
Dolphins Don’t Run Marathons
View: on Bookshelves |
Like MarisaRose's review? Post a comment saying so!
You are not logged in. Please log in or sign up to view members replies, participate in the discussion, and access more features.




















