Synopses & Reviews
First and foremost a book about running,
The Longest Race takes readers alongside ultramarathoner Ed Ayres as he prepares for, runs, and finishes the JFK 50-mile race at a then record-breaking time for his age division — 60 and older. But for Ayres, this race was about more than just running, and the book also encompasses his musings and epiphanies along the way about possibilities for human achievement and the creation of a sustainable civilization. Looking back over a lifetime of more than 50 years of long-distance running, Ayres realizes that his running has taught him important lessons about endurance, patience, and foresight. These qualities, also hallmarks of being human, likely helped humans to survive and thrive in the evolutionary race — and, Ayres posits, they are qualities absolutely necessary to building a sustainable society.
Grounding each step of his argument are vivid details from this particular race and other moments across his long running career. These experiences take us far beyond the sport, into new perspectives on our origins as future — and what it means to be a part of the human race. In the end, Ayres suggests, if we can recapture the running prowess and overall physical fitness of our “wild” ancient distance-hunting ancestors, we will also be equipped to keep our bodies, our society, and the entire world running long into the future.
Review
“Ed Ayres is a legend who shares his many provocative insights and lessons in an informative yet enjoyable way. A true champion, Ed uses his gift to help us all be the best that we can be.” Dean Karnazes, athlete and New York Times bestselling author
Review
“The Longest Race is ostensibly about Ed Ayres running the JFK 50 ultramarathon, a historically rich course that includes a number of Civil War battlefields. As he carries us with him along this course, he deftly uses the past to inform the present. His overarching question: What does it take for an individual as well as a civilization to go the distance without collapsing?” Lester R. Brown, President of Earth Policy Institute
Review
“Ed Ayres frames The Longest Race within an eight-hour period at a single event — the John F. Kennedy 50 Mile race. Then between its start and finish lines he deftly weaves a lifetime’s experiences and observations: a memoir of a pioneering ultramarathoner and professional writer, a primer of advice on going long distances, an anthropological study of humans as runners, and a set of environmental/ecological essays. Each topic alone would have made a good book. Together they yield a great one, richly detailed and finely written.” Joe Henderson, former editor, Runner’s World
Review
“An ultramarathon is made up of a million moments, and you’re different at the end than you were at the start — it’s the perfect metaphor, as Ed Ayres makes clear, for the race we’ve got to run now, with focus and grit, if we’re going to deal with the deepest trouble we’ve ever stumbled into as a planet.” Bill McKibben, Schumann Distinguished Scholar, Middlebury College
Review
“The Longest Race tells an extraordinary story of the athletic spirit fueled by, yet transcending, competition. Deep in our souls, it’s a thing we can find only through the hard work of caring and striving, not only for ourselves but for our fellow competitors, for life itself, and indeed for the fate of the Earth. We return to this spirit or we perish.” David Meggyesy, author of Out of Their League, Former Western Director, NFL Players Association
Review
“An extraordinary journey of the human body, mind, and soul running together — not as hierarchical powers in a troubled civilization, but as a holistic and exhilarating display of ancient capabilities that lie at the heart of the human experience. This is a breathtaking, feet-on-the-ground story.” Marianne Williamson, author of A Woman’s Worth and Healing the Soul of America
Synopsis
Among endurance runners, there are thosewho have run very long distances, and thenthere are those who have run very long distancesfor a very long time. Ed Ayres exemplifies the latter; having run in over 600 races acrossfifty-five years, he is arguably the most experiencedAmerican distance runner still competingtoday. A book no one else could have written, The Longest Race is his urgent exploration of theconnection between individual endurance anda sustainable society.
The Longest Race begins at the starting lineof the 2001 JFK 50 Mile the nation s oldestand largest ultramarathon and, like other suchraces, an epic test of human limits and aspiration.At age sixty, his sights set on breaking theage-division record, Ayres embarks on a courseover the rocky ridge of the Appalachian Trail, along the headwind-buffeted towpath of thePotomac River, and past momentous Civil Warsites such as Harpers Ferry and Antietam.
But even as Ayres focuses on concerns familiarto every endurance runner starting strongand setting the right pace, the art of breathing, overcoming fatigue, mindfulness for the courseahead he finds himself as preoccupied withthe future of our planet as with the finish line ofthis 50-mile race.
A veteran journalist and environmentaleditor who harbors deep anxiety about our longtermprospects, Ayres helps us to understandhow the skills and mindset necessary to completean ultramarathon are also essential for grapplinganew with the imperative to endure not only asindividuals, but as a society and not just for 50miles, but in the longest race we are all calledupon to run.
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Among endurance runners, there are those
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Among endurance runners, there are those
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Among endurance runners, there are those
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Among endurance runners, there are those
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Among endurance runners, there are those
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Among endurance runners, there are those
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Among endurance runners, there are those
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Among endurance runners, there are those
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Among endurance runners, there are those
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Among endurance runners, there are those
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Among endurance runners, there are those
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Among endurance runners, there are those
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Among endurance runners, there are those
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Among endurance runners, there are those
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Among endurance runners, there are those
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Among endurance runners, there are those
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Among endurance runners, there are those
About the Author
Ed Ayres has been running competitively for fifty-five consecutive years, and he enjoys it as much now as he did when he joined his high school cross-country team in 1956. Ayres placed 3rd in the first New York Marathon in 1970, and he is the only runner of that race still competing today. Having participated in the early growth of American interest in roadrunning, trail-running, and marathons, he also became one of the pioneers of ultrarunning. He placed third in the US 50 Mile championship in 1976 (in 5:46:52), first in the JFK 50 Mile in 1977, and first in four US national age-division championships at 50K road, 50K trail, and fifty miles. He was the founding editor and publisher of Running Times magazine, and also worked for thirteen years as the editorial director of the Worldwatch Institute.