My voracious
appetite for reading about lifting stuff continues for some reason, and I just
put away 692 pages of Marty Gallagher’s “Purposeful Primitive” in about 4
days.
Let me start
the review with the ending: this was a great read and I highly recommend
it. It’s only $8.50 on Kindle right now,
which is what convinced me to get it in the first place. I was originally looking for Steve Justa’s “Rock
Iron Steel” book, which I intend to read soon, and this showed up as a
suggested reading and when I saw the page total, cost and reviews I figured I
had nothing to lose.
Unlike some
of my other reviews, I did not take notes as I went, simply because, at nearly
700 pages, it would have made the reading process INSANELY long. Instead, I’m just going to go over what I
liked and what I didn’t like.
QUICK REVIEW OF THE
BOOK
The book is
divided into 4 areas of focus: lifting (iron), the mind, cardio and
nutrition. Each of the 4 areas are, in
turn, subdivided into 3 sections: 1 that details the work and philosophy of the
“masters” of that area, 1 that constructs a plan to implement the lessons FROM
the masters for the reader to use, and from there a series of essays written by
Gallagher regarding the topic. I really
enjoyed this approach to the subject matter, but it became a little obvious
that the “essays” on the subject were just collections of previously written
articles from Gallagher. Nothing wrong
with that necessarily, but I’m getting tired of “books” that are just a bunch
of articles put together.
The iron
section is the most expansive, taking up about a third of the book, but each
section contains a large amount of information.
Nothing is skimped over or given lip service.
THE GOOD
-This is
clearly a labor of love, and Marty put a TON of work into it. I’ve been reading a lot of different books
from different authors recently, and it’s become easy to tell who just slapped
something together to get a paycheck vs who really wanted to put out a quality
product, and this is firmly in the latter.
-This is a completely
comprehensive tome. One of those books
you could give to someone and be like “Ok, you wanna know how to train and eat
for the rest of your life? Here you go.” I love books like that. Sure, it’s 700 pages, but it’s still so much
time and effort saved to have it all in one place.
-Along with
that, it’s a VERY easy read. Marty is a
professional author, having written for many publications, and his chops show
on that. It’s not his first time
stringing together sentences. He can
attempt to get a little too eloquent at times, but he’s still very talented at
his craft. But along with that, he has
walked the walk, with an 800lb squat and various lifting titles earned.
-Every
section is VERY fascinating. Marty’s “Purposeful
Primitive” approach is all about stripping out complexity and getting back to
basics, which, in turn, ends up going in some VERY unique directions. I found the nutrition section particularly
fascinating, as it basically splits between a dichotomy of very frequent eating
of small meals or intermittent fasting via “The Warrior Diet”.
-To go
further into the above, Marty is big on Taoism and, in turn, duality. His nutrition protocol fits right in there,
but much of how he approaches training does as well. It’s very much about how opposites compliment
each other, and works itself out through some old school periodization.
-Because of
Marty’s unique position as an interviewer for magazines as well as a coach for
some of the greatest strength athletes ever, he allows readers a very deep “insider
look” ito some unique characters. I’ve
relayed this book as what Jamie Lewis’ “365 Days of Brutality” was supposed to
be, because while Jamie wrote about what he’d read/heard about great athletes,
Marty wrote about what he actually personally witnessed.
THE BAD
-On a few
occasions, Marty tries to emphasize how badass he and his friends are in the
lifting world, and it just comes across as either cringey or douche-y. One particular section talking about New
Years Resolution “mullets” was really just plain old off putting. Paul Kelso did a much better job in
Powerlifting Basics talking about how we all need to come together as iron
brothers, and this was too much “us vs them” stuff. It’s not often enough to detract from the
overall quality of the book, but there were times I felt like abandoning the
essay portions because I didn’t think there’d be anything worthwhile with that
nonsense in it. I was happy to be proven
wrong.
-Marty sees
cardio primarily as a fat burning device and is very big on employing a heart
rate monitor to ensure one has their heart rate in the correct zone to employ
this. That’s a fine use of cardio, but
as an athlete it didn’t gel with me.
Never cared for heart rate monitors, and my big emphasis is improved
conditioning.
-The mind
section contains a lot of helpful tips for how to psyche up for the big set in
your training, and that truthfully goes against everything I’m about. I save psyching up for competitions. Marty’s claim is that you get more out of
your training by tapping into this potential, but I find it’s a recipe for
burnout. In turn, I didn’t get a whole
lot from the mind sections.
SHOULD YOU BUY IT?
Unquestionably
yes. No qualifiers. Anyone with even the slightest interest in
physical training should own a copy of this book. You get a ton of value for your dollar, get
to read about a bunch of different experts in different fields, and will be
presented with at least ONE new idea, or find out you were mistaken about one
you held before. I thought I knew what
the Warrior Diet was, and honestly, after reading the book, I genuinely want to
give it a try someday, despite how much I’ve chided intermittent fasting. I loved learning the logic behind it. Same holds true with learning about how and
why the great ones trained and ate the way they trained. Add this one to your collection and share it
with a friend when you are done, because it’s worth getting out there in
circulation.
Great review Mythical. I'll definitely be picking up this book.
ReplyDeleteHave you seen this:
https://www.reddit.com/r/weightroom/comments/kahkh7/interview_with_a_former_prisoner_with_45_years_of/
on Reddit /r/Weightroom's front page? It's a pretty interesting excerpt, and seems like the kind of story/perspective oriented strength book you might enjoy.
Appreciate it dude. The author of that book actually reached out to me to do a review. I'll most likely pick up a copy of it in the near future.
DeleteThanks for sharing, just got a copy :)
ReplyDeleteHope you enjoyed it dude!
DeleteI just want to say that I recently ran accross your blog and want to say I really appreciate your intent with this blog. Also looking forward to your next rant.
ReplyDeleteAwesome dude: happy to have you as a reader.
Delete