Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - 10 of My Favorite Fitness Books
Episode Date: February 14, 2022Reading great health and fitness books is one of the most effective ways to learn how to build your best body ever and a body you can proud of. There are many fitness books out there, but we only have... so much time and energy to give to reading. We want to make sure we pick the ones that will have the highest return on our investment. So which books should you read? In this podcast, I’m going to share the nine best fitness books of all time (as of February 2022, at least). So if you’re interested in getting at least a little bit better at losing fat, getting stronger, performing better, or getting healthier, this episode is for you. I’m going to share the books that have helped me do those things and that can help you as well. Timestamps: 0:00 - Our (new and improved) protein bars are back! Try them risk-free today! Go to buylegion.com/bar and use coupon code MUSCLE to save 20% or get double reward points 4:24 - Starting Strength by Mark Rippetoe 8:52 - Bigger Leaner Stronger by Mike Mathews 14:29 - Thinner Leaner Stronger by Mike Mathews 15:56 - A Guide To Flexible Dieting by Lyle McDonald 18:40 - Peak Performance: Elevate Your Game, Avoid Burnout, and Thrive with the New Science of Success 21:32 - Muscle For Life by Mike Matthews 23:51 - Triathletes Training Bible by Joe Friel 26:33 - 5/3/1 by Jim Wendler 31:26 - Strength Training Anatomy by Frederic Delavier 31:23 - All About Powerlifting by Tim Henriques Mentioned on the Show: Our (new and improved) protein bars are back! Try them risk-free today! Go to buylegion.com/bar and use coupon code MUSCLE to save 20% or get double reward points
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello, and welcome to Muscle for Life. I'm Mike Matthews. Thank you for joining me today
to hear about book recommendations. You know, I haven't done a book club episode in some time,
not because I haven't been reading. I have on my normal schedule every day, but I just haven't
made the time to do a book club episode, I guess is my only excuse. And I'm going to do one on the book
on writing well, one of my favorite books on writing. That'll be the next book club episode.
But in this episode, I'm going to talk about fitness books and I'm going to talk about the 12
best fitness books of all time as of February 8th, 2022 at least. And as a little bit of a preamble to it, there was a
Dutch philosopher, scholar, and priest named Erasmus. And he once quipped, when I have little
money, I buy books. And if I have any left, I buy food and clothes. And you know, that's a human
with his head screwed on straight. Now, while he was focused on the health of the soul, I think his statement
is equally true if you want to also maximize the health and the well-being of the body,
because reading great health and fitness books is one of the most effective ways to learn how
to build your best body ever, to learn how to build a body you can be proud of. And that,
ever to learn how to build a body you can be proud of. And that of course raises the question of, well, which books should I read? Something I do get asked fairly often about my own books,
of course, but which other books are worth reading? There are many health and fitness books.
Many of them are not worth reading, and we only have so much time and so much energy and attention to give to books.
And so we want to make sure that we pour these precious resources into the ones that are
going to offer the highest return on the investment.
And so if you are interested in getting at least a little bit better at losing fat or
building muscle or getting stronger or getting and staying healthier, living longer, performing better
inside or outside of the gym, then this episode is for you because I'm going to share 12 books
that have really helped me do those things and that can help you as well.
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save 20%, try the bars risk-free and see what you think. Okay, so let's start with a book that everyone who is serious about strength training should read,
and that is Starting Strength by my favorite prickly Texan, Mark Ripoteau.
Now, Starting Strength is the most comprehensive guide to barbell training that you can find. And it gives you everything you need to know about
squatting, bench pressing, overhead pressing, and deadlifting safely and effectively. And for what
it's worth, I myself have been using Mark's principles for, I guess it's 10 years now. It
was 10 years ago that I found him and I found starting strength and I learned how to squat
properly, how to bench press properly,
overhead press properly, deadlift properly. And although I have made slight tweaks to my form,
I think I've gotten better. I hope I've gotten better over the last 10 years. I am still
fundamentally moving in the ways that Mark teaches in starting strength. And these are also the principles that I teach in my own
work. In fact, the first edition of Bigger, Leaner, Stronger had the starting strength method
of squatting, bench pressing, overhead pressing, and deadlifting. And I gave credit to Mark for it
and plugged his book in my book. I didn't say that this is how I think that people should squat and deadlift and so forth,
that this is how Mark Ripito thinks that people should do it. And here's why I agree with him.
And so in starting strength, what you'll find is that each chapter focuses on a particular
exercise and it breaks down the main challenges and characteristics of each movement. And it shows
multiple pictures of proper and improper form from
different angles. It also gives you some cues, some little mental reminders that you can use to
help dial in correct technique. And those can be particularly helpful when the weights get heavy
and when you get deeper into sets and it's getting hard and you don't have the mental capacity to focus on four
different components of your form. Think about when you are coming close to muscular failure
on a barbell squat or a barbell deadlift. It gets really hard and you can focus maybe on one thing
and that one thing could be a mental cue that helps
you keep your lower back straight if you are deadlifting, for example, or helps keep your
knees in line with your toes if you're squatting.
And the reason starting strength has gained basically cult status at this point is it's
simple, it's effective, it's suited to many different goals, and it is not just
teaching you how to do exercises, but it has programming too. There is a program you can
follow. And if you want to get strong, if you want to build muscle, if you want to become more
resistant to injury, if you want to become more athletic, even if you want to age better,
starting strength certainly can help. And if you like starting
strength, if you give it a read, then I would also recommend practical programming, which takes a
closer look at how to design workout routines. Starting strength has less of that. It's more
prescriptive in its programming and its routines here. Just do this, which is better for the target
crowd for that book, which is people who are relatively
new or brand new to proper strength training, proper barbell training. And when you're new,
I mean, I remember when I was new to all of this stuff, there's a lot to learn. There's a lot to
digest. It is more helpful to just be told what to do so you can get going and start seeing results.
And then along the way, educate
yourself further and further until you can start creating your own workout routines, for example.
And that's what practical programming is before. Now, one area where starting strength is lacking
is diet advice. You should know that. So if you want to get the most out of your training,
you're going to want to learn about at least the fundamentals of proper dieting. You're going to want to learn about at least the fundamentals of proper
dieting. You're going to want to learn about energy balance. You're going to want to learn
about macronutrient balance, micronutrient balance. You're going to want to learn basically
how to control your calories according to your goals, how to make sure that you're eating enough
protein, how to set up your carbs and fats so they work for you, and how to ensure you are getting
enough nutritious food.
And those are things you are not going to learn in starting strength, but that you can
learn in the other books we're going to talk about.
And let's get to that next book, which is bigger, leaner, stronger by yours truly, which
I do think should be on this list, but also, which I think is a good follow-up to starting strength because you will learn
all of the diet fundamentals that are needed to lose fat and build muscle and maintain your ideal
body composition. So even if you don't want to follow the Bigger, Leaner, Stronger program,
if you want to follow starting strength, I still would recommend at least reading the diet nutrition part of Bigger,
Leaner, Stronger, because that information is going to help you get more out of starting
strength. And why else you should read Bigger, Leaner, Stronger, or maybe consider doing the
program is, in my humble opinion, what starting strength is to barbell training. Bigger, leaner, stronger is to body
composition training, so to speak. Lifestyle bodybuilding, I guess you could say. This book,
Bigger, Leaner, Stronger, is the ideal fitness book for men who want to gain muscle, lose fat,
get healthy. It is especially geared toward men who have yet to gain their first 25-ish pounds of muscle,
either because they are new or because they just haven't been getting as much as they should have
out of the years of training that they've been doing. That was me, for example, in my first
seven years of training. In training five to six days per week, one and a half hours sometimes in the gym, maybe even two hours.
After seven years of that consistent, I had gained maybe 25 pounds of muscle.
That's not very good. An average responder, an average male responder to weightlifting
should be able to gain 25 pounds in his first two years of weightlifting. If he, if he knows what
he's doing, if he were to read bigger, leaner, stronger, and do it two years of bigger, leaner,
stronger, it would put, will put 25 pounds of muscle on, on just about anyone. And I should
also mention that bigger, leaner, stronger is geared a little bit more toward a younger crowd, let's say 20 to 40 or 20 to 45 or 18. Sure. 18 to 40 or 45 is the target
demographic for bigger, leaner, stronger. Now that is not to say that it isn't for guys who are 45,
50, 55 plus many, many guys, 40 and 50 plus over the years, I've read the book on the program and
have done quite well, but I have a different book that is specifically geared to the 40 plus crowd, men and women called muscle
for life. So if you're listening and if you've heard about these different books that I have,
and if you're a little bit confused as to which one would be right for you, which program would
be right for you, if you are 40 plus and relatively new to all of this stuff,
get Muscle for Life. If you are under 40 and new to all this stuff, and if you don't have a lot
of weight to lose, let's say if you don't have to lose more than 25% of your body weight,
then Bigger, Leaner, Stronger is going to be right for you. And if you do have a lot of weight to lose, then I actually would
recommend Muscle for Life because the program, well, programs, it has beginner programs for men
and women, intermediate for men and women, and advanced for men and women. Whereas Bigger,
Leaner, Stronger has one program and it has a three-day version, a four-day and a five-day per
week, but it is just one program that does
call for squatting and deadlifting and bench pressing and overhead pressing. And that's not
where I would recommend that everyone start. If I were personally coaching a guy, even if he's 20
years old, who has to lose a hundred pounds, let's say, to get to a healthy body weight and a healthy body composition,
I would not start with heavy squats and deadlifts and bench pressing and overhead pressing. We might
start with daily walks and then we would start with some resistance training. We would do body
weight exercises and then we would probably add bands and then we would add dumbbells and we would
work our way into barbell training, but we wouldn't start with it.
And that is muscle for life.
Muscle for life takes people from walking and doing bodyweight exercises all the way
up to barbell training.
Whereas Bigger Leaner Stronger asks you to do the barbell training from the beginning.
And in Bigger Leaner Stronger, it is comprehensive. I mentioned
that it gives you all of the know-how that's needed to make your diet work for you, how to
improve your body composition, eating foods you like. And then on the training side of things,
it goes through every exercise on the program. I'm actually releasing a new fourth edition of
Bigger, Lean Leaner Stronger
in the next month or so that has pictures of everything and updated instructions for everything.
If you download the free bonus material, there are links to videos to everything.
There is a year's worth of workouts that you can follow that were created by me and are the
kind of baseline programming that I'd recommend for
anyone following the program. There's a lot of information on supplementation. I mean,
there's a lot, there's a whole inner game section in Bigger, Leaner, Stronger. I really did try to
make this the last fitness book that most men will ever need to read. Moving on, moving on.
All right. Enough of hugging myself and my beautiful
Bigger, Leaner, Stronger book to Thinner, Leaner, Stronger. And I'll just, I'll make this one fast.
This is the female version of Bigger, Leaner, Stronger. And I wrote this book because back in
the day, a lot of women were reading Bigger, Leaner, Stronger, reaching out to me, asking if
they could do a program like that. They don't want to get bigger
per se. They would rather get thinner or fitter, but they liked the leaner and they liked the
stronger. And after hearing from so many women, I decided that I needed to take Bigger, Leaner,
Stronger and make it as applicable to women as I possibly can. And so I did that and that is
Thinner, Leaner, Stronger. And I'm did that and that is thinner, leaner, stronger.
And I'm also releasing a new fourth edition of that. It's going to follow the release of BLS
4.0, but all of my work on the manuscript is essentially done. So I have a couple of people
helping just with formatting and digging up some references that I need and some other things.
And so that's going to be out soon
as well. And I'm excited. I'm really excited. I'll make sure I'll let you know here on the podcast
when the books are live. And one of the things on those new fourth editions is if you have bought
an ebook of Bigger, Leaner, Stronger or Thinner, Leaner, Stronger in the past, you will get,
or the audio book, I think, yeah, I think it's for eBooks and audio books.
You will get the fourth editions for free. So if you have, well, one of them, you'll get that one,
but if you have them both, you'll be able to just update your content and you don't even have to pay for it. Okay, moving on. Let's talk about a guide to flexible dieting by Lyle McDonald. Now, Lyle has a special place in my heart because he was one of
the first people to beat the drum for flexible dieting, which I recommend in all of my books,
in Muscle for Life, in Bigger Leaner Stronger, in Thinner Leaner Stronger, and I've recommended
many times here on the podcast and articles.
And Lyle actually coined that term all the way back in 2005 when he published a guide to flexible
dieting. That's one of his books. And that book is based on a very simple and counterintuitive,
but profound idea. And that is that people who take a black and white, all or nothing,
no pain, no gain, rigorous, rigid approach to dieting usually fail. And people who are more
relaxed about it, who are more patient, who are willing to compromise here and there, who don't
expect perfection, they usually succeed. And they don't just succeed in losing weight. They usually succeed in keeping
it off, which is really the goal, right? Weight loss is not necessarily a success. Weight maintenance
is the success. You don't want to lose a bunch of weight with a diet and then gain a bunch of
the weight back and then lose it again with the same diet or a different diet, gain it back and yo-yo like
that forever. You want to lose weight and keep it off and maintain the body composition that you
want. And flexible dieting is very effective for that because it allows you to be flexible enough
to enjoy your diet and to actually stick to your diet while still getting results. And
that's what this book teaches you to do. And so if you've ever struggled to lose or maintain your
weight or felt like there must be a better way than these silly fad diets, then a guide to
flexible dieting is for you. And even if you are an experienced, flexible dieter, you still are
going to enjoy the book if you pick it up and you are
going to learn things. Lyle has always been one of my favorite educators in the space, and he has a
controversial personality. He is an acquired taste, I guess you could say, but his spiky nature has
never bothered me personally. If you like what I'm doing here on the podcast and elsewhere, definitely check out
my sports nutrition company, Legion, which thanks to the support of many people like you,
is the leading brand of all natural sports supplements in the world.
Okay, moving on to Peak Performance by Steve Magnus and Brad Stolberg. And if you're the
kind of person who is chasing some big goals in your personal and or your professional life,
and if you sometimes feel frazzled, if you sometimes feel rushed, frustrated, I think
you're going to like this book. I really liked it. I actually did a book club episode on this book.
It is a penetrating,
it is a practical overview of the science of maximizing your mental and physical performance
over the long haul. And you'll find a lot of the information in Peak Performance in other
self-development books, which is inevitable. A lot of these books are very derivative. Now,
this one I don't feel is, but I'm just saying a lot of self-development, self-help books seem to say the same thing just in different words. But in this case,
the author's background in competitive sports, Magnus, and then Corporate America, Stolberg,
give their teachings a unique flavor. They bring their personalities and their backgrounds and their experiences into the book. And in different ways,
both of them overreached and undermined their aspirations. And this book is full of insights
on how to avoid the same fate. This is very much the book they wish they could have just given
themselves back before they decided to do many stupid things. And that also was Bigger, Leaner, Stronger, by the way.
That was how I wrote that book initially. It was the book that I wished I had when I started
lifting weights so I didn't do many stupid things and waste a lot of time doing stupid things.
And back to peak performance, I particularly enjoyed in this book the guidance on finding and formulating
a purpose in really any area of life and how that can help you guide your decision-making
on a day-to-day basis. And if you've never taken time to do big picture painting, so to speak,
to look at your bigger picture and how your day-to-day ties into it, I would recommend setting some time aside when you can
be by yourself and when you have quiet and you can think to do that. Because if you get it right,
it not only helps you make better decisions and helps you realize more of your potential,
it makes everything that you do more enjoyable and more satisfying. Even the drudgery, the drudgery now feels
purposeful. And I'm speaking firsthand. I could record a whole podcast on that in particular.
Maybe I should. Let me know if you want me to. Mike at muscleforlife.com. So anyways,
if you want to learn simple, effective, and sustainable strategies for finding your purpose
and consistently working toward it for the months and years and maybe even decades that
it really takes without burning out, I think you are going to enjoy Peak Performance.
The next book on my list is another one of my own, but hear me out, humor me. It is called
Muscle for Life, and I wrote it for a very specific crowd. I wrote it for men and women who are 40 plus and
who are starting out newly in their fitness journey. And especially men and women who are 40
plus who have a lot of work to do, who have a lot of weight to lose or, or who are very out of shape.
And if you are one of those people, then Muscle for Life is going to
be much better for you than, say, Bigger Leaner Stronger or Thinner Leaner Stronger. Because,
for example, Muscle for Life has three different exercise programs to choose from, a beginner
program, an intermediate program, and an advanced program. Now, if you compare that to say bigger leaner,
stronger or thinner leaner, stronger, those books, they have three, four and five day per week
programs to choose from. But the difficulty is a bit higher than the advanced program on muscle
for life. Whereas the beginner program in muscle for Life, you can do that at home with
basically no equipment. You start out working with your body and then you add some bands.
And then as you get stronger, as you get fitter, you work up to including some dumbbell exercises.
And then you work up to including some machines and finally some barbell exercises. Whereas in
Bigger Leaner Stronger and Thinner Leaner Stronger,
you're jumping right into the barbells,
the dumbbells, the machines.
Those books are written for people
who are ready to jump into the deep end, so to speak.
And so if you are 40, 50, 60, even 70 plus years old,
I have some good news for you.
And that is research shows that it is
never too late to build muscle, lose fat and get healthy. And muscle for life will give you a time
proven and science based blueprint for eating and exercising that will help you get from wherever
you are, no matter how out of shape you might be right now, you can go from that to fit or even super fit, no matter your
age, no matter your circumstances, muscle for life will show you the way. The next book on my list
is the triathletes training Bible by Joe Friel. And if you have caught the endurance sports bug,
then you have a problem that you're going to have to solve. How do you keep getting faster
without training all the time or without getting injured? And especially if you want to also keep
doing some strength training, maybe you can't do five days per week, but you want to keep doing
something to retain muscle and strength as well. Well, this book, The Triathlete's Training Bible, is going to help.
It will help you make your endurance workouts as productive as possible so you can keep pushing
the envelope of your fitness and keep improving your performance without having to live for it,
while still being able to fulfill obligations at home and at work, and while still being able to fulfill obligations at home and at work and while
still being able to stay healthy and stay strong and injury free. And just to mention, if you are
getting into triathlons, if that's what you want to do, this book is even more important for you
because you have to train for three very different sports simultaneously. And this book is going to help you tremendously with doing that.
In it, Friel explains the physiology of endurance sports.
He explains the fundamentals of proper training and periodization, extremely important in
endurance sports.
He also offers great advice on the mindset that is needed to excel at endurance sports. And it has systems, it has
tools, it has tips for really any sport that you might want to pursue. It is not just for triathletes.
So for example, Friel's system for budgeting training time throughout the week, month,
and year is just as applicable to a runner, a weightlifter, or a golfer as it is to a triathlete. And you know, really,
that systematic approach to the application of effort, that's really what we're talking about,
it can be applied to any area of life that requires effort. And the same is true about
chapters 10 and 11, which are all about threading the needle between training load and recovery. And one of the most powerful lessons from the book that I took
away from it, at least, is that consistent, moderate, purposeful training beats out sporadic,
extreme, haphazard training every time. The secret to excelling in endurance sports is to put in the
time year in, year out, and not crush yourself with workouts in the months or the weeks leading
up to a competition. Okay, let's move on to 5-3-1 by Jim Wendler. And this is often called
Wendler 5-3-1, just so you know what I'm referring to. And it is a strength training program, and there is a book to go with it that helps you get as strong as possible, as fast as possible,
and as safely as possible. And to understand the value of 5-3-1 though, you have to first
understand a little bit about Jim. So he had a successful college football career,
and then he became possessed by powerlifting.
And he worked his way to squatting over 1,000 pounds, bench pressing 675 pounds, and deadlifting 700 pounds.
And in the process, though, he became overweight and overtrained and a bit unglued.
weight unglued. And as he says in his book, and I'm quoting here, I was 280 pounds and I wanted to be able to tie my shoes without turning red. I wanted to be able to walk down the street without
losing my breath. And after losing weight through dieting, of course, Wendler decided that he wanted
to get strong again, but he didn't want to follow the complex time-consuming programs that he had used as a
power lifter. He wanted something simpler and something that he could maybe share with other
people so they didn't have to make the same mistakes that he made. And after decocking the
many training programs that he had followed over the years, he took those essences and he created a bare bones, but very effective program called 5-3-1.
And really what this program is, is it's the most useful features of some of the more advanced
powerlifting programs without a lot of the frills and unnecessary complexity. So this is a very
minimalistic routine and it can work for anyone. I myself have done it. I haven't done it in a while, but I did do it when I first learned about it because it sounded like fun. And my first edition of Beyond Bigger, Leaner, Stronger was inspired in part by Wendler's work. And now the second edition, which I released about a year or so ago, has different programming. And I do think it is a better approach, but that is not to say, well, let's say a better approach for the people Beyond Bigger, Leaner, Stronger is four. But that is not to say that the approach
in the first edition is bad. I just think, again, that the second edition better meets the needs of
its intended audience. Now, why is it called 5-3-1? Well, this is the progression system.
So in it, Wendler has you increase the weights in a specific way that he describes that makes for a very productive and short workout where you're going from five reps to three reps to one rep over a series of weeks.
Now, 5-3-1 is not ideal for everyone.
Its main drawback, for example, is that it is low volume, which we know is not optimal for more advanced weightlifters
who are trying to maximize muscle and strength gain. But 5-3-1 is an excellent introduction to
periodized strength training. And so if you have never tried a periodized strength training program,
you could do a lot worse than starting with 5-3-1. Or if you are more interested in bodybuilding,
even if it's just lifestyle bodybuilding, like I consider myself a lifestyle bodybuilder,
and you want to follow up maybe a high volume training block with something that is lower volume.
And if you want to see how much strength you can gain in a lower volume training block,
then 5-3-1 could also be great
for you. All right, next up, we have Strength Training Anatomy by Frederick Delavier. And while
there are many books out there that explain how to do different exercises and how to train different
muscle groups, none are as thorough as Strength Training Anatomy. Each exercise description is
brought to life by fine-grained anatomy drawings that show which muscles the exercise works and how the different
positions can affect muscle recruitment and how the surrounding anatomical structures
work in the exercise, you know, bones and ligaments and tendons and connective tissues.
And this is one of those
books that when you flip through it, you can't help but appreciate the amount of work that went
into it. Delavier studied human anatomy for years. He even conducted autopsies on cadavers
to better understand the human body. And so he poured all of that understanding into this book.
Okay, last we have all about powerlifting by Tim
Henricks and powerlifting of course, is the game of lifting as much weight as you can for a single
repetition on the squat bench press and deadlift and in that order. And although competitive
powerlifting isn't everyone's cup of tea, it's not mine. For example, you can learn a lot about
getting big and strong by studying the sport, even if you don't want to participate in the sport.
And in this book, all about powerlifting, weightlifting coach and competitive powerlifter,
Tim Henriquez, he examines the sport of powerlifting from all angles. You learn about
the history of it. You learn specific technique tips for increasing your squat, bench press, and deadlift. You learn about powerlifting gear, what to use,
and why, how to use it properly. The book goes into programming your workouts and preparing for
your first meet and much more. And so if you're someone who is interested in getting really strong
or at least as strong as you possibly can, then I think you are going to enjoy this book. Well, I hope you liked this episode. I hope you
found it helpful. And if you did, subscribe to the show because it makes sure that you don't
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and let me know what I could do better or just what your
thoughts are about maybe what you'd like to see me do in the future. I read everything myself.
I'm always looking for new ideas and constructive feedback. So thanks again for listening to this
episode, and I hope to hear from you soon.