A New Yorker Best Book of the year An Esquire Best Nonfiction Book of 2022 From Insomniac City author Bill Hayes, "who can tackle just about any subject in book form, and make you glad he did" (SF Chronicle)—a cultural, scientific, literary, and personal history of exercise, now in paperback. Exercise is our modern obsession, and we have the fancy workout gear and fads from HIIT to spin classes to hot yoga to prove it. Exercise—a form of physical activity distinct from sports, play, or athletics—was an ancient obsession, too, but as a chapter in human history, it's been largely overlooked. In Sweat, Bill Hayes runs, jogs, swims, spins, walks, bikes, boxes, lifts, sweats, and downward-dogs his way through the origins of different forms of exercise, chronicling how they have evolved over time, dissecting the dynamics of human movement. Hippocrates, Plato, Galen, Susan B. Anthony, Jack LaLanne, and Jane Fonda, among many others, make appearances in Sweat, but chief among the historical figures is Girolamo Mercuriale, a Renaissance-era Italian physician who aimed singlehandedly to revive the ancient Greek “art of exercising” through his 1569 book De arte gymnastica. Though largely forgotten over the past five centuries, Mercuriale and his illustrated treatise were pioneering, and are brought back to life in the pages of Sweat. Hayes ties his own personal experience—and ours—to the cultural and scientific history of exercise, from ancient times to the present day, giving us a new way to understand its place in our lives in the 21st century.
Show moreA New Yorker Best Book of the year An Esquire Best Nonfiction Book of 2022 From Insomniac City author Bill Hayes, "who can tackle just about any subject in book form, and make you glad he did" (SF Chronicle)—a cultural, scientific, literary, and personal history of exercise, now in paperback. Exercise is our modern obsession, and we have the fancy workout gear and fads from HIIT to spin classes to hot yoga to prove it. Exercise—a form of physical activity distinct from sports, play, or athletics—was an ancient obsession, too, but as a chapter in human history, it's been largely overlooked. In Sweat, Bill Hayes runs, jogs, swims, spins, walks, bikes, boxes, lifts, sweats, and downward-dogs his way through the origins of different forms of exercise, chronicling how they have evolved over time, dissecting the dynamics of human movement. Hippocrates, Plato, Galen, Susan B. Anthony, Jack LaLanne, and Jane Fonda, among many others, make appearances in Sweat, but chief among the historical figures is Girolamo Mercuriale, a Renaissance-era Italian physician who aimed singlehandedly to revive the ancient Greek “art of exercising” through his 1569 book De arte gymnastica. Though largely forgotten over the past five centuries, Mercuriale and his illustrated treatise were pioneering, and are brought back to life in the pages of Sweat. Hayes ties his own personal experience—and ours—to the cultural and scientific history of exercise, from ancient times to the present day, giving us a new way to understand its place in our lives in the 21st century.
Show moreA New Yorker Best Book of the year An Esquire Best Nonfiction Book of 2022 From Insomniac City author Bill Hayes, "who can tackle just about any subject in book form, and make you glad he did" (SF Chronicle)—a cultural, scientific, literary, and personal history of exercise, now in paperback.
Bill Hayes is the author of How We Live Now, Insomniac City, and The Anatomist, among other books. Hayes is a recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship in nonfiction and is a frequent contributor to the New York Times. A collection of his street photography, How New York Breaks Your Heart, was published recently by Bloomsbury. Hayes has completed the screenplay for a film adaptation of Insomniac City, currently in the works from Brouhaha Entertainment, and he is also a co-editor of Oliver Sacks's posthumous books. He lives in New York. Visit his website at billhayes.com
Charming and idiosyncratic... a distinctive, often moving blend of
historical and memoirist writing.
*The New Yorker*
An enthusiasm it’s impossible not to share...Erudite, ludic,
eccentric, energetic and historically transporting, it’s like
falling through a gym and landing in a joust.
*The Guardian*
At its best, Hayes’ book reframes exercise as a deep series of
questions thinkers and scientists have been contemplating for
thousands of years. . . . it's a thrill to see them gathered in one
place.
*GQ.com*
I was riveted by Sweat and its extraordinary tale of the ups and
downs of exercise over millennia. Who knew?
*Jane Fonda*
If there is one person in the modern world who can reinvigorate
Mercuriale’s enormous unfinished labor and bridge the physical, the
philosophical, and the poetic — bridge Whitman and Warhol, Plato
and Peloton, Kafka and Curie, Tennessee Williams and Serena
Williams; bridge the ‘immediate bodily now’ of exercise with ‘the
wisdom of the past that had faded from living memory’ — it is Bill
Hayes. And so he does, in Sweat.
*Maria Popova, The Marginalian*
Bill Hayes’ peripatetic inquiry into the history of exercise is a
delight for anyone who loves a good search for a missing
manuscript, as well as anyone who loves being ‘so drenched in sweat
as to feel amphibious.’ And if those predilections happen to
overlap for you, hang onto your Bosu ball—you’re in for a treat.
Hayes weaves his riveting findings in the archives with a
revelatory memoir of physical exertion that begins to answer that
most human of questions: what does the body mean?
*Alison Bechdel*
At its heart, [Sweat] is a deeply personal book about the universal
subject of humans attempting to grapple with the meaning of their
own physicality. . . . an erudite memoir of a lifelong fitness
enthusiast who is looking to place his own forays into
weightlifting, swimming, boxing, and yoga in the context of a
historical tradition that spans from Hippocrates to Jane Fonda.
*Outside*
Perhaps because exercise is such a universal—and universally
humbling—part of our lives, Sweat does, seemingly effortlessly,
what all good history books should do: take the past and make it
vastly more human.
*The Times*
An appealing, essential addition to the shelf. . . Hayes brings his
resilient good nature and charming candor to the page. . . Whether
in a library, a gym or the Grecian ruins of an ancient locker room,
Hayes captures the majesty of bodies in motion.
*Shelf Awareness, starred review*
Hayes blends science, travel, history, and memoir into a thoroughly
engaging, and idiosyncratic, narrative inquiry into ‘exercise'...
Hayes writes with panache as he crosses three continents in search
of fitness routines past and present, from fencing to Jane
Fonda.
*National Book Review*
Hayes entertainingly describes his adventures in the world of
fitness, learning how to box at a pugilists' boot camp, swimming,
running, and performing power yoga in a New York gym class. A brisk
jaunt through the history of working out in Western
civilization.
*Booklist*
At once a book about exercise history, and a travelogue, a literary
discovery tour, and another of Hayes’s personal and exhilarating
memoirs.
*Library Journal*
Obsessed by both working out and its history, Hayes writes a book
that combines them...An entertaining hodgepodge of autobiography,
travelogue, and history.
*Kirkus Reviews*
With an introspective eye and dynamic prose, Hayes keeps his
investigation grounded in his personal search for meaning.
*Publishers Weekly*
If you want to see peek at the other side of the locker room, check
out Sweat... Hayes takes readers back centuries to see how our
physical health has become what it is, and why we've perceived it
as both pain and pleasure through time. It's a personal and
historical look, literally sweatin' to the oldies.
*Bookworm Sez*
Part history, part travelogue, part memoir, Sweat tackles the rich
topic of exercise (distinct from sports), from Hippocrates to Jane
Fonda.
*Lit Hub*
Bill Hayes has an unusual set of skills . . . He is part science
writer, part memoirist, part culture explainer.
*The New York Times*
Read just 50 pages, and you'll see easily enough how Hayes is
[Oliver] Sacks's logical complement. Though possessed of different
temperaments, both are alive to difference, variety, the
possibilities of our rangy humanity; both are avid chroniclers of
our species . . . Frank, beautiful, bewitching.
*Jennifer Senior, the New York Times on INSOMNIAC CITY*
Playful and powerful . . .profoundly moving . . . Hayes writes with
so much panache that reading this book is thrilling.
*The Boston Globe on FIVE QUARTS*
[A] beguiling brew of fascinating scientific facts and
illuminating, poignant anecdotes . . . vital and pulsing with
energy.
*Entertainment Weekly on FIVE QUARTS*
This touching memoir of the late neurologist Oliver Sacks, by a
photographer and writer with whom he fell in love near the end of
his life, turns a story of death into a celebration.
*The New Yorker on INSOMNIAC CITY*
[Insomniac City] seems written in heightened states of feeling that
infuse every detail with meaning and transient beauty.
*Shelf Awareness Best Adult Books of 2017 - Nonfiction*
“Insomniac City is a beautiful memoir in which Oliver Sacks comes
wonderfully to life--a double portrait that also provides a vivid
picture of New York City's neighborhoods and people. The ending is
exquisitely wrought, heartrending and joyous.
*Joyce Carol Oates on INSOMNIAC CITY*
No lack of tenderness in Insomniac City, Bill Hayes's memoir of his
life in New York with the writer and neurologist Oliver Sacks.
*The Guardian on INSOMNIAC CITY*
As eloquent in its silences and visuals as it is in its telling of
the secrets of the heart . . . The brilliance of Insomniac City is
that almost Tolstoy-an directness and concretion of observation,
both down-to-earth and downright visionary.
*Bay Area Reporter on INSOMNIAC CITY*
Remarkably poignant. Readers will find themselves wishing the two
men had more time, but as Hayes makes clear, they wasted none of
the time they had.
*Publishers Weekly on INSOMNIAC CITY*
A unique and exuberant celebration of life and love.
*Kirkus on INSOMNIAC CITY*
Buy a box of tissues and pray for snow: This is the perfect weekend
February read, and will have you alternately bawling and giddily
clapping your hands for the lovers that may not have had the time
they deserved, but certainly made the best with the time that they
had.
*Newsweek, "The Best New Book Releases" for INSOMNIAC CITY*
Like Patti Smith's haunting M Train, Hayes' book weaves seemingly
disparate threads of memory into a kind of sanctuary--a secret
place where one can shake off the treasured relics of past lives
and prepare to be reborn anew.
*San Francisco Chronicle on INSOMNIAC CITY*
Hayes captures both the frenetic, exhilarating pace of New York
City as well as the whimsy, fun and romance of the years he spent
with Sacks.
*New York Post on INSOMNIAC CITY*
Insomniac City is resoundingly about life--about being wide awake
to possibility, to the beauty of every fleeting moment.
*Oprah.com on INSOMNIAC CITY*
All laud and honor to Hayes.
*The Washington Post on THE ANATOMIST*
Hayes, a lifelong insomniac, pursues sleep as avidly and lyrically
as Nabokov pursued butterflies.
*San Francisco Chronicle on SLEEP DEMONS*
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