Monday, August 10, 2020
Books To Read At Any Speed On The Treadmill
Books To Read At Any Speed On The Treadmill If your daily grind includes hopping on the treadmill, your daily grind can then also include some fresh reading time. Listening to music can get you going, but reading can, too. Here are some suggestions for whatever speed you (t)read. If youâre the strolling kind, then dive into some quiet poetry. Start with the solemn haiku of Basho. Try Bashos Haiku: Selected Poems to get a smattering of harmonious moments in time. Because his works focus mostly on the outdoors, itâll be like taking a walk outside. Plus, haiku is short, so youâll feel like youâre accomplishing a lot of reading during even a short walk. For more nature-infused poems along with some historic elements, Joy Harjoâs She Had Some Horses can do the trick. Harjoâs poetry reveals stunning landscapes and traditions of Native American heritage. Read Li-Young Leeâs poetry for more familial history. Rose offers a collection of poems that is sometimes funny, always sweet, though sometimes bitter sweet. (His latest, The Undressing, contains similar elements but the tone and subject matter gets a little heavier, and might be for a quicker pace). If you increase the incline, increase the pace, or increase both, power walk your way into these types of tomes. Laughing can help burn those calories and distract from a longish walk, so dive into anything by the comedians you love. Read or even reread Tina Feyâs Bossypants. This auto-lit collection of essays gives the inside scoop of her life through her classic wry delivery. Even the serious moments are light. If youâre into comedy thatâs also sci-fi and absurd, go for Douglas Adamsâs The Hitchhikerâs Guide to the Galaxy trilogyâ"reading them in order will help, but if you like the bonus of confusion getting your heart pumping, read them in any order you wish. Either way, youâll feel like youâre actually moving through the universe as you move on that belt. As an alternative, instead of laughing, you can check out Joshua Ferrisâs The Unnamed because itâs literally about a man who canât stop walking. Motivation! If the slow burn of jogging with a moving incline is your thing, the slow burn of creepy eerie thrillers can be your thing, too. Go with Paula Hawkinâs Into The Water or (reread) The Girl on the Train. Both push you to the edge of suspense, and The Girl On The Train makes you feel like youâre moving as she commutes. Anything by Octavia Butler will have that similar slow burn of eeriness with a sci-fi edge. Fledgling has some vampire moodiness to keep you going. Also, Lauren Groffâs The Monsters of Templeton will work because there are literally joggers. If you like to run, like really run, like at warp speed, then you need adrenaline. Megan Abbottâs You Will Know Me will have you running, perhaps trying to run away from all the underground seediness of the subculture of gymnastics. Plus, itâs got an element of fitness. Another non-stop crazy-fest is Lolita Filesâs Sex.Lies.Murder.Fame. Itâs about exactly what the title says, and yet, you still never see whatâs coming before you turn the page. Once your timer winds down, youâll want to keep coming back to the treadmill not just to work out but to keep on readingâ"speed reading! (I was waiting to use that pun!) Want some inspiration to get you on that treadmill for the rest of the winter? Check out Aisling Twomeys Books To Push You Through Winter Training. via GIPHY
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.