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16 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
#1 BBS Manual: "Training to Failure" - D.I.Y Hercules for Everybody,
By OverTheMoon (overthemoonreview@hotmail.com) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Encyclopedia of Modern Bodybuilding (Paperback)
*Note* There is a revised edition of this book.
The Encyclopedia of Modern Bodybuilding is the largest tome of bodybuilding information found in any publication, finishing up at around 800 pages with approximately 1000 pictures and weighing in at a whopping 5.8lbs, making it the only book that gives you a workout while reading it. Arnold divides his massive manuscript into a number of sections, starting with the history of bodybuilding, competitions, the gym experience and training techniques (the core exercises) before rounding up with various poses and additional information on bodybuilding supplements and diets. Arnold advocates trying to find pictures of a bodybuilder who fits your size and figure and then aiming to replicate their results. Arnold himself used Reg Park as a model for his first teenage foray in the gym while in subsequent years built each body part up using different bodybuilding models to achieve his own unique juggernaut definition. This is but a tiny fraction of the kind of good quality recommendations that the Encyclopedia comes up with. Bodybuilders (bbs) everywhere refer to the `encyclopedia' for its awesome display of photographs of superhuman bbs throughout the ages. There is no lack of snaps that detail the human anatomy. You will likely run through the book many times to find that muscle group or separation that you missed the first time. It is startling how much anatomy you need to get around before you can understand what impact each exercise has on the developing muscle. This is a fully fledged subject that will have your attention for years to come and there is no better place than to start here. Combining this book with the movie "Pumping Iron" on DVD will give you a much better idea of where the information is coming from and you will see most of the faces in this book actually exercising and involved in many of the competition photographs that are on display here. Arnold's description of the muscle groups and how to work them is coupled with illustrations and photographs to show the kind of development you should be aiming to achieve. Creating striations on muscle groups like deltoids and pectorals are topics that will cause you to go back to page one to re-examine everything you have read and seen. Anatomical research coupled with exercising methodology and application with dieting will transform your physique over the course of even a few months. As a lifelong hobby you will be bulking up before your first year is out. A few years will have you at competition level. The whole point is get into the gym to work off that fat to reveal your true shape, a shape that can be defined and built upon with muscle. Arnold Schwarzenegger, and other world-class bodybuilders, advocate more than one set per exercise called High-Volume Training, HVT, the traditional method of using multiple sets to train to failure by training each set to failure, resting, and then repeating the set to failure, as many times as it takes before you just can not do anymore sets for that body part. You will build muscle no matter what kind of genetics you have if you stick with HVT. Hypertrophy is the scientific term for the enlargement of muscle tissue caused by a specific amount of intensity needed for the hypertrophy to occur. No intensity, no hypertrophy, no gain. HVT achieves hypertrophy every time because each muscle group is trained to failure. This is the key to building muscle. You must get that straining feeling where you just can't do another repetition. If you find yourself doing lots of repetitions (more than 10) then you need to add more weight. Arnold includes various Power-Training techniques to help shock the body into being able to lift heavier weights. They work. He also includes increasing intensity techniques by utilizing `forced reps', `negative reps', `isolation training', `supersets' and `stripping methods' among a host of others to learn about. There is much more here then any review can hope to explain (and look at the length of mine!). That is why it is 800 pages or so. Apart from the five stars which it deserves the book does have some major drawbacks. The first big drawback is that all the photographs involve drug use. There are only a few photographs of bodybuilders who have not used steroids and the reason is obvious. It is the little dirty secret that hides behind all the bigger muscle on display. You simply will not get as big as these legends without doing drugs. However you will certainly be able to achieve the same definition and still have very big muscles without drugs. The bodybuilders who did not do drugs are at the start of the book in the history of bodybuilding. Look at the photographs of everybody until you reach Reg Park. After that it is all drug users. Achieving the same sizes without drugs is near impossible apart from the exceptionally genetically gifted person. There is also a lesson to learn from this drug experimentation. Don't do it if you put any value on the most important muscle of all... your heart. All of the guys in this book are much older now and you can see them in the bonus material of the "Pumping Iron" DVD. Sadly they don't look good (sadly some are in wheelchairs) and even Arnold has had a bypass. Just go with food type supplements like 100% Whey Protein and Creatine and stay away from all forms of steroids. The other major drawback is that the 70s bodybuilding era did not give much regard to what is called perfect form. Perfect form is all about doing the exercises the right way to avoid injury. A lot... and I mean a lot... of the exercises in the Encyclopedia are considered very dangerous, mainly because of back arching. These include nearly all of the `Rows'-type exercises (Bent-Over Barbell Rows, Bent-Over Dumbbell Rows, T-bar Rows and the One-Arm Dumbbell Row) which are abandoned today. A `Straight-Leg Deadlift' is something you must do right or you can injure yourself. The `Goodmorning' is considered iffy. Using a Smith-machine for the `Vertical Machine Press' is bad because it has a set path. Triceps `Extensions' are a problem. Take care with `Dipping' and avoid `Sissy Squats'. Arnold's book does not do perfect form so well and in most cases just comes up with plainly dangerous material. This is not to say that you can not do the exercises now and again. Most you can, but in the long term you will only get an injury. Avoiding injury = gain. It is as simple as that. So learn perfect form. How to do this? If you want to learn perfecting form then read "The Insider's Tell-All Handbook on Weight-Training Technique" by Stuart McRobert. This book clearly explains how to perform Back Extension, Cable Row, Calf Raise, Close-Grip Bench Press, Crunch Abdominal Work, Curl, Decline Bench Press, Dumbbell Row, Finger Extension, Grip Machine Training, Incline Bench Press, Leg Press, Lever Bar Work, L-fly, Neck Work, Overhead Lockout, Overhead Press, Parallel Bar Dip, Partial Deadlift, Pinch-grip Lifting, Prone Row, Pulldown, Pullover, Pullup/Chin, Pushdown, Rader Chest Pull, Shrug, Side Bend, Squat, Stiff-legged Deadlift, Thick-bar Hold and the Wrist Roller Training. Get it along with this book and you will not be disappointed with what you can learn between the two. Getting that perfect form right is something that you can learn from the latter book and start doing better in a year than the bb who has been in the gym for ten years. It is that important. Slow and controlled exercising does not avoid injury. Injury has nothing to do with the speed or control of the exercise. Injury occurs because of bad form. So get the form right, learn what Arnold teaches you about developing muscle groups and stay away from drugs to live until you are 90 with a darn near perfect body. It can be done!
13 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Good book but beginner beware!,
By A Customer
This review is from: Encyclopedia of Modern Bodybuilding (Paperback)
I like the section on the history of bodybuilding. It shows how people went from being fat powerlifters to creating a cut physique. Most of these guys are big but don't have veins all over them, which is better than some of today's "champs." I have to commend Arnold for building a big but still proportionate body. Arnold's "beginner" programs will kill a beginner and may even stress an experienced bodybuilder into overtraining. Good book, lots of different exercises, good photos, interesting history.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Any questions about bodybuilding? This is your source.,
By A Customer
This review is from: Encyclopedia of Modern Bodybuilding (Paperback)
What I find most valuable about this book is that it provides you with almost every movement done in body building. This is especially helpful in learning how to do a particular movement correctly and without hurting yourself. Everything is explained and illustrated very well. True the nutrition side is lacking but as mentioned in other reviews but that is not the focus of the book.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Great Book,
By A Customer
This review is from: Encyclopedia of Modern Bodybuilding (Paperback)
This book was the original motivator to get me into the gym in the early 90's. I recall sitting day in and day out reading and re-reading this book. While it might not be the most up-to-date, it still hits all the key areas. Let's face it, there are only so many different workouts you can do to hit a particular muscle. This book covers them all. Lacking in diet information should not sway your decision to purchase, as you can find in depth diet information from EAS for free. I lost the book and am finally ordering my second copy. Can't wait to start looking it over again.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The very thing to help pump me up for workouts.,
By A Customer
This review is from: Encyclopedia of Modern Bodybuilding (Paperback)
This book has been the most imformative of any that I have read. Not only does Arnold give you key training tips, but nutrition tips as well. He even mentioned how to make a protien shake from scratch. I found that reading this book over and over helped me realize my everyday goal. Before my workout I would flip through the pages to the particular bodypart I was doing and get motivated just by looking at the pictures of certian poses. This is by far the best book on the over all needs in bodybuilding. Thanks for the help. Chris Ingersoll
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
One Word: Revolutionary,
By
This review is from: Encyclopedia of Modern Bodybuilding (Paperback)
This is a late review but there is only a few reasons to go out of your way to get this version. I can draw some political connotations this day in February but I'll hold back. There is some information that the Governor cut out from the 2nd edition The New Encyclopedia of Modern Bodybuilding : The Bible of Bodybuilding, Fully Updated and Revised and can only be found in here. It's not really necessary to have this because of the revised 2nd edition but if your curious in how the Governor helped disadvantaged citizens it's all in here. And some other information for the Arnold fan and historian. See my other review on the 2nd edition.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
He is the greatest!,
By JMearsCSCS@aol.com (San Diego, Ca) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Encyclopedia of Modern Bodybuilding (Paperback)
Many people will tend to argue about this book and how some things are no good, the pictures are great, this and that. We must really look at what this book is and was. when this book was written many of today's scientific principles in lifting were not even known. Also,in this time bodybuilding and even general fitness were not held in such a good light as now, they were considered freaks. I think that this book is great for the new enthusiast, one who wants to know some history of bodybuilding, and general fitness information. I am a certified personal trainer and think this book is great reading.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Must For Any Gym-goer's Library!,
By brute@access1.net (San Diego, CA USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Encyclopedia of Modern Bodybuilding (Paperback)
For excercise info, motivation, and historical content, not many books can beat this one. Although it is light on nutritional advise and supplements, anyone can get Bill Phillip's Supplement book for free, and a good nutrition book as well, to complete the library. Arnold's book shows excercises and routines which will have been accepted as foundational; none of these foo foo 1 workout a week, 1 set per body part business. Just hardcore training. The book is worth its price for the photos alone, let alone the written content. But, enough of my rambling; it's the most dog-eared book on my coffee table. "Nuff said!"
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Very good, but imcomplete only because it is just one man...,
By A Customer
This review is from: Encyclopedia of Modern Bodybuilding (Paperback)
Many of the reviews for this book say either "it's the absolute best!" or that "it sucks!" But one thing to remember is that this is one man's point of view, even if it is one of the most reliable and respected points of view. As to the body building content of the book, it is excellent, although it contains some holes due to when it was written. (However, there is a new edition, revised and updated in hardcover, released this year.) This book provides a lot of inspiration and insight as well as instruction and information. The area of diet in the book is under-done, but again this is probably due to the time it was written, so I would suggest an extra source for diet and nutrition information, although most of the basics are covered at least somewhat. (Check out Franco Columbu's nutrition book.) The beginning bodybuilder may find it difficult to begin directly from this book, but then he says in the book to attach to someone who is more experienced, so that you don't get left in a sink or swim situation. Anyway, overall, this book is fairly excellent.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
THE BEST BODYBUILDING BOOK YET,
By A Customer
This review is from: Encyclopedia of Modern Bodybuilding (Paperback)
A really good book.If you want to know anything about building your body and almost everything about the sport.This is the book to buy.Hence this is the only book you need! Well,the book may not have some information just discovered/found and superstars of the 90s but it is still a worth-reading book. WELL DONE MR.SCHWARZENEGGER!
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Encyclopedia of Modern Bodybuilding (Pelham Practical Sports) by Arnold Schwarzenegger (Hardcover - March 26, 1987)
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