
About the Author
Myatt Murphy, a certified strength and conditioning specialist (CSCS) and former fitness editor of Men's Health magazine, is the author of 10 books, including Testosterone Transformation, The Men's Health Gym Bible, and Men's Health Ultimate Dumbbell Guide.
Works by Myatt Murphy
Men's Health Ultimate Dumbbell Guide: More Than 21,000 Moves Designed to Build Muscle, Increase Strength, and Burn Fat (2007) 86 copies, 2 reviews
Men's Health The Body You Want in the Time You Have: The Ultimate Guide to Getting Leaner and Building Muscle with Workouts that Fit Any Schedule (2005) 54 copies
25Days: A Proven Program to Rewire Your Brain, Stop Weight Gain, and Finally Crush the Habits You Hate--Forever (2017) — Contributor — 13 copies
Men's Health Push, Pull, Swing: The Fat-Torching, Muscle-Building Dumbbell, Kettlebell & Sandbag Program (2014) 12 copies
The Men's Health Gym Bible (2nd edition): Includes Hundreds of Exercises for Weightlifting and Cardio (2017) 11 copies, 1 review
Testosterone Transformation: Lose Belly Fat, Build Muscle, and Boost Sexual Vitality (2012) 6 copies, 1 review
Men's health push, pull, swing : the fat-torching, muscle-building dumbbell, kettlebell and sandbag program (2014) 2 copies
Fade drom Blue #3 1 copy
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Reviews
Testosterone Transformation: Lose Belly Fat, Build Muscle, and Boost Sexual Vitality by Myatt Murphy
There were some things I liked about this book. The recommendations for getting enough sleep, lifting *heavy* weights, the importance of destressing, and the cautions about xenoestrogens in our environment were all spot-on. The book also included a number of good studies with the latest research on areas related to maximizing testosterone. The diet recommendations were decent, although the unwillingness to stray too far from conventional orthodoxy in the face of scientific evidence (i.e. show more citing a study showing saturated fat isn't bad for you, and then cautioning not too eat too much of it anyways) was irritating. If the book just had these parts, I'd probably give it 4 stars.
But where the book really fell hard was in the actual workouts. The volume and intensity on these workouts simply lost all connection with reality. As an example, it recommended during the first phase of the workout, to start by doing 21 pullups -- 7 weighted, 7 with a little less weight, and 7 more with just bodyweight. How many gym newbies (which the book clearly seems oriented towards, despite the insane workouts) are going to be able to do that?! Even people who've been doing pullups for years likely can't do that many at once. It also included a couple of sets of "one handed Olympic barbell preacher curls". In other words, curling 45 pounds in one hand, using a 7 foot bar! Again, someone fairly advanced might be able to do this, but in NO WAY is this suitable for someone to start out with. And the workout volume was similarly insane -- the workouts advocated doing 30+ sets per workout. For bodybuilders who have been lifting for a while, sure, but this is not at all suitable for someone just starting out. This section gets 1 star.
So, my advice -- if you're interested in this topic, read everything except for the actual workout portion of the book. The non-workout parts are pretty good. For a workout routine, check out something like Starting Strength, or read Beyond Brawn. show less
But where the book really fell hard was in the actual workouts. The volume and intensity on these workouts simply lost all connection with reality. As an example, it recommended during the first phase of the workout, to start by doing 21 pullups -- 7 weighted, 7 with a little less weight, and 7 more with just bodyweight. How many gym newbies (which the book clearly seems oriented towards, despite the insane workouts) are going to be able to do that?! Even people who've been doing pullups for years likely can't do that many at once. It also included a couple of sets of "one handed Olympic barbell preacher curls". In other words, curling 45 pounds in one hand, using a 7 foot bar! Again, someone fairly advanced might be able to do this, but in NO WAY is this suitable for someone to start out with. And the workout volume was similarly insane -- the workouts advocated doing 30+ sets per workout. For bodybuilders who have been lifting for a while, sure, but this is not at all suitable for someone just starting out. This section gets 1 star.
So, my advice -- if you're interested in this topic, read everything except for the actual workout portion of the book. The non-workout parts are pretty good. For a workout routine, check out something like Starting Strength, or read Beyond Brawn. show less
Good review of workouts and gym equipment. I really like the photography and breakdown of workouts into sections.
The Men's Health Gym Bible (2nd edition): Includes Hundreds of Exercises for Weightlifting and Cardio by Myatt Murphy
sadly not that useful, partially outdated. i'd stick to figuring it out yourself through online resources on yt, reddit, and otherwise (though obviously you need to have a bs detector)
Men's Health Ultimate Dumbbell Guide: More Than 21,000 Moves Designed to Build Muscle, Increase Strength, and Burn Fat by Myatt Murphy
I have a copy of this in my garage next to my weights and am relying on it as a guide for my exercise program.
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Statistics
- Works
- 26
- Members
- 273
- Popularity
- #84,853
- Rating
- 3.3
- Reviews
- 5
- ISBNs
- 21










