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Russell Taylor (1) (1960–)

Author of The Looniness of the Long Distance Runner

For other authors named Russell Taylor, see the disambiguation page.

10+ Works 108 Members 2 Reviews

About the Author

Russell Taylor is the copy-writing arm of the partnership that produces the "Alex" business world cartoon strip for one of UK's national newspapers. He lives in London, England.

Works by Russell Taylor

The Looniness of the Long Distance Runner (2001) 50 copies, 2 reviews
The Best of Alex 2004 (2004) 13 copies
The Best of Alex 2005 (2005) 12 copies
The Best of Alex 2007 (2007) 12 copies
The Best of Alex 2003 (2003) 11 copies
The best of Alex IV (1992) 3 copies
The best of Alex III (1990) 3 copies

Associated Works

Alex Iii: Son of Alex (1990) 26 copies
The Best of Alex 2002 (2002) 14 copies
The Best of Alex 1998-2001 (2001) 14 copies
The Best of Alex V 5 (1993) 4 copies
The Best of Alex II (1990) 4 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1960-07-08

Members

Reviews

2 reviews
05 Jun 2009 - Sensible Bookshop, Hay-on-Wye

How could I resist this title?! This is a likeable and amusing story of one man's struggle to achieve running the New York Marathon. From his first efforts on the treadmill through to Race The Train and other proper races, he manages to be funny and to capture the feelings of the runner, especially a beginner who is trying to work up to something fairly spectacular. I liked that, like me, he is not at his best in the first 20 mins of a run (and show more therefore doesn't like doing 5ks as they stop before he's got into his stride) and the bits about the feeling of anticlimax after doing a big race. One for the runner, I think, who will recognise bits of the experience and smile wryly. I wonder what the author is doing now. show less
This is a book written by an out-of-shape man approaching 40 as he prepares to run the NYC marathon. I read it because I'm pretty much in the same situation, though right row I'm focused on a 5k not a marathon. It was interesting to read about his training routine and challenges, though the descriptions of the races got a bit tedious - each race filled an entire chapter and read pretty much like the previous race chapters (struggling to find the starting line; overcoming the mental and show more physical pains of racing; views along the way, which is mostly other runners; the letdown of the finish line). The only difficult part in the reading was that this was written by a Brit for the UK market, so he goes to no effort to explain his colloquialisms or his soccer, rugby, and cricket analogies, so at times the book left me feeling
Ike a foreigner with no travel guide. But mostly it was a fun, if not a bit fluffy and prone to cynicism, read.
show less

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Associated Authors

Charles Peattie Illustrator

Statistics

Works
10
Also by
6
Members
108
Popularity
#179,296
Rating
3.8
Reviews
2
ISBNs
18

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