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9 Reviews
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An excellent beginners GUIDE to inline skating
Liz Miller has written a great book for the beginner skater. It covers what you need, how to avoid injuries, maintenance of equipment and over a dozen of skills.

Now some people think you can learn to skate by just reading a book, and that is wishfull thinking and NOT what this book is about! If you want to learn inline skating, take a lesson from a certified...

Published on May 19, 2001 by J. Van 't Spijker

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46 of 50 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Not for beginners. A cram book for experienced skaters
This is NOT a book for the beginners. This book is sort of an exam cram book which is designed for the people who want to pass Inline Skate Exam, if such thing ever exists.

Probably most of the techniques in inline skating are described in this book - very succinctly, but to the point. You really have to sit down, and STUDY this book. I skate on ice (since when I...

Published on March 11, 2000 by El Barto


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46 of 50 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Not for beginners. A cram book for experienced skaters, March 11, 2000
By 
El Barto (Houston, TX USA) - See all my reviews
This is NOT a book for the beginners. This book is sort of an exam cram book which is designed for the people who want to pass Inline Skate Exam, if such thing ever exists.

Probably most of the techniques in inline skating are described in this book - very succinctly, but to the point. You really have to sit down, and STUDY this book. I skate on ice (since when I was 10), and have been inline-skating for more than 5 years (well, on and off). And I wanted to get the proper techniques of inline skating. Because of my experience, I could study this book, and get the feeling of what it is talking about most of the time, but I wonder whether beginners would have any idea.

As noted by other reviewers, this book lacks pictures. Beginners NEED pictures. If this book was titled as "Inline Skate Exam Preparation Summary Book", I would give three or four stars. But since it was titled as "The beginner's guide to in-line skating", I have to give only 1 star. There is no way beginners can learn any skating technique from this book. I know since I have been teaching my kids and my friends how to skate/rollerblade. They need demonstration. They need EASY demonstration. Words alone just don't work for beginners.

While there are good succinct descriptions which really get to the point, there are other ridiculous descriptions, like: <Manhole covers and Cattle guards>. Essentially the paragraph was saying, "Avoid them or roll over". I mean, what's the point ? Obviously, you should also avoid hitting against the cars or other bikers on the street.

In general, I do NOT think that this is a good book about inline skating, and especially beginners should avoid this book.

One day, I went to a used book store, and found this amazing book that other reviewers talked about: "How To Skate" by Inline Skate Magazine. For each technique, it shows at least more than 10 pictures(step-by-step photographs) with four or five paragraphs of explanation. This IS what you (beginners) should buy. Unfortunately, this book won't be available now, since it says "Summer 1995, Display until July 31".

The author of this book should actually have had some experience of teaching BEGINNERS how to skate, before they publish a book for them. If they have had, they wouldn't have written this way.

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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Solid book for skating course, September 1, 1999
By A Customer
This is a good step-by-step book that looks like it belongs for a fall one quarter college course in inline skating. The book is well done and quite helpful, but would be best served in a class with a competent instructor. Not too many illustrations and the word-pictures would be hard to follow on your own. Also a good reference to check technique as you improve.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An excellent beginners GUIDE to inline skating, May 19, 2001
By 
J. Van 't Spijker (Budel, NoordBrabant Netherlands) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Liz Miller has written a great book for the beginner skater. It covers what you need, how to avoid injuries, maintenance of equipment and over a dozen of skills.

Now some people think you can learn to skate by just reading a book, and that is wishfull thinking and NOT what this book is about! If you want to learn inline skating, take a lesson from a certified instructor.( ...) When taking those lessons, you can read through this book and it will give you excellent insights on how and what.

This book makes great reading for both instructors as well as the general skater. This second edition (1998) is a very good improvement on the first edition (1992).

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13 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars One of the worst books you can buy to learn roller-blade, February 19, 1999
By A Customer
This should be one of the worst book you can buy to learn or increase your ability to roller-blade. Imagine that you are trying to learn piano with virtually no picture. Imagine that you are learning to play guitar, tennis, ...etc from reading explanations with virtually no picture. This book is how the authors try to teach you how to roller-blade. Of course it has some pictures, but what is the point of having just one picture for each technique ? For example, let's say you want to learn backward cross-over. This book has only one illustration (not even a picture) for this one. What is the point for this ? There are bunch of good books out there which show you at least 15 pictures of the snap shots for each technique. And this is how you learn roller-blade: by trying to imitate what good stakers do. Not by "blah, blah, blah..." I was greatly disappointed by this book, and it shows clearly that you should NOT buy the books by the *high* ratings in Amazon. Buying this book is a great way to waste your money. I would actually want to give minus stars, but Amazon doesn't have such rating unfortunately.
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Good supplement for IISA lessons!, July 21, 1998
By 
tobywan (Berwyn Heights, Maryland) - See all my reviews
Like her previous book on skating routes in California, Liz Miller's Get Rolling is clearly written and helpful for raw beginner through intermediate skaters. It also follows pretty closely the curriculum offered here in Washington, D. C., by IISA-certified instructors. I am a beginner (moving on to intermediate now) skater, and I have taken private lessons, group instruction, and used Liz Miller's books to advantage. While I would NOT advocate trying to learn how to skate entirely from a book (you definitely need a live, skilled instructor to explain and demonstrate the moves and to spot what you are doing wrong), this book provides further clarification, serves as a reminder, and is useful as a reference during practice out in the parking lot. Better than any other book on in-line skating that I have used.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Excellent textual description but not enough pictures, September 4, 1999
They say, "A picture is worth a thousand words." In the case of rollerblading, this adage certainly holds true. As previous reviewers have stated, this book is sorely lacking in pictures. Sure, every few pages it has a black and white picture of a skating technique, but the quanitity of pictures is not enough. Another problem is that the book does not have STEP by STEP pictures. To illustrate a technique, the author only places one photograph from only one angle. A more helpful approach would have been to demonstrate a technique by showing the technique from start to finish with a series of freeze frame photographs. I'm guessing that placing more pictures would have driven up the cost of the book, but I for one would have shelled out more money for the extra photographs. However, despite this seemingly fatal flaw of not enough photographs, the book makes up for it with very clear prose. The author has an uncanny talent for describing skating techniques with the right words. Most of the time I had no trouble following the author's descriptions; however, the lack of step by step pictures made it very hard for me to know if I was doing the technique correctly despite the clear writing style. Originally, I was tempted to give this book three stars but the extraordinary writing of the author pushes the book up to four stars, but the lack of diagrams ultimately is too big of a stumbling block to merit the book five stars. However, to put the score in perspective, other roller blading books I have checked out also did not have step by step diagrams for each technique so this book, "Get Rolling," is the best among them until someone produces a book with step by step diagrams -- preferably colorful, glossy ones. Until then, I'm gonna continue looking -- and skating.
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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Very basic and easy to understand. Good illustrations, July 13, 1998
By A Customer
This review is from: Get Rolling: The Beginner's Guide to In-Line Skating (Paperback)
I really liked this book. I'll admit that a friend of mine was photographed for this photo (Lester!) which made me curious about the book but since I've been inline skating for about a year, I found the book to be a good resource with helpful tips.
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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars This is a useful little hand book!, May 3, 1998
By A Customer
This review is from: Get Rolling: The Beginner's Guide to In-Line Skating (Paperback)
This is one of the most useful skating book I've read. There are differnt lessons and exercises. This book can actually help you build up your skills step by step. There are no photo but a lot of illustrations.
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3 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Good for 1st-time-roller-in-life, July 23, 1998
By A Customer
Well, I find lots of photos and things to remember. It's good for people like me, it gave me a piece of bravery to try this. I liked it. I just got worried happening to buy another book, when I got used to enjoy it. But, I am not going to be a next world great rollerblader.
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Get Rolling: The Beginner's Guide to In-Line Skating
Get Rolling: The Beginner's Guide to In-Line Skating by Liz Miller (Paperback - Sept. 1992)
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