The sports gene Inside the science of extraordinary athletic performance

David J. Epstein, 1983-

Sound recording - 2013

Explores the roles of both genetics and training in athletic success, arguing that both are equally necessary components of athletic achievement while considering such topics as race, gender, and genetic testing.

Saved in:

2nd Floor Show me where

COMPACT DISC/796/Epstein
1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor COMPACT DISC/796/Epstein Checked In
Subjects
Published
[Ashland, Oregon] : Blackstone Audio p2013.
℗2014
Language
English
Main Author
David J. Epstein, 1983- (author)
Edition
Unabridged
Physical Description
9 audio discs (approximately 10 hours, 30 min.) : digital ; 4 3/4 in
ISBN
9781469027340
  • Introduction: in search of sports genes
  • Beat by an underhand girl: the gene-free model of expertise
  • A tale of two high jumpers (or: 10,000 hours plus or minus 10,000 hours)
  • Major league vision and the greatest child athlete sample ever: the hardware and software paradigm
  • Why men have nipples
  • The talent of trainability
  • Superbaby, bully whippets, and the trainability of muscle
  • The big bang of body types
  • The vitruvian NBA player
  • We are all black (sort of): race and genetic diversity
  • The warrior-slave theory of Jamaican sprinting
  • Malaria and muscle fibers
  • Can every Kalenjin run?
  • The world's greatest accidental (altitudinous) talent sieve
  • Sled dogs, ultrarunners, and couch potato genes
  • The heartbreak gene: death, injury, and pain on the field
  • The gold medal mutation
  • Epilogue: the perfect athlete.
Review by Choice Review

Focusing on "extraordinary athletic performance," this book, in essence, examines the old "nature versus nurture" paradigm with sports performance at the elite level for its framework. Unsurprisingly, both genetic input (explored in a chapter titled "Why Men Have Nipples" and others) and training (as discussed relative to the "rule" requiring 10,000 hours of sport-specific work) are revealed to be important to athletics excellence. To his credit, Epstein (journalist, Sports Illustrated) has incorporated research in the areas of exercise physiology, human genetics, ethnic variability, transgender issues, and nearly any other conceivable area of input to address the question of presence (or absence) of a particular sports gene. The 16-chapter book contains appropriate footnotes, with expansive reference and interview material. At the end of the text are 33 pages of additional selected references and notes pertinent to each chapter and a detailed ten-page index. This book is appropriate for all readers interested in understanding the genetics and training interplay in high-level sports performance. Summing Up: Recommended. Students of all levels and general readers. L. A. Meserve Bowling Green State University

Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Are Tiger Woods, Jim Ryun, Serena Williams, and Michael Jordan natural athletes whose success in their own sports would have occurred whether they developed their gifts or not? Are some individuals genetically disposed to some sports, while others lack the genetic predisposition to succeed at the same sports? Sports Illustrated senior writer Epstein probes these questions in a disjointed study. Drawing on interviews with athletes and scientists, he points out that "a nation succeeds in a sport not only by having many people who practice prodigiously at sport-specific skills, but also by getting the best all-around athletes into the right sports in the first place." Epstein observes that some scientists and athletes confirm that the so-called 10,000 hours of practice produces quality athletes, while others assert that the number of hours spent in practice matters little if a team has not already selected superior athletes in the first place. Epstein comes closest to scoring a home run in his provocative and thoughtful focus on the relationships between gender and race and genetic determination-why do male and female athletes compete separately, and are there genetic reasons to do so? and why do the best sprinters always come from Jamaica and so many long-distance Olympian runners hail from Kenya? While he helpfully leads readers into the dugout of modern genetics and sports science, his overall conclusions challenge few assumptions. In the end, he concedes that "any case for sports expertise that leans entirely either on nature or nurture is a straw-man argument." Agent: Scott Waxman, Waxman Leavell Literary. (Sept.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Epstein (senior writer, Sports Illustrated) presents a fascinating account of the latest discoveries in sports science. His conclusions are uncertain, however. He spends the bulk of the book focusing on genetic and anatomical differences in humans, and how these differences seem to help in making individuals, and groups of individuals, particularly skilled at certain sports. The evidence he presents thus leans heavily in favor of nature being the primary factor in the formation of athletes. Yet, he opens and closes his book by stating that nature and nurture are inseparable when it comes to the question of athletic performance. That is, training your body to do an activity is as important as having the raw ability to do that activity. From this, readers may understandably conclude that Epstein is suggesting one thing while stating another. Nonetheless, he should be commended for the clear and unbiased manner in which he presents his information, not in itself an easy task, especially when tackling controversial issues such as gender and race differences in athletic performance. Verdict Fuzzy conclusions aside, this book is essential reading for sports fans interested in the science of sports, and for readers (not scholars) interested in the science of human differences.-Derek Sanderson, Mount Saint Mary Coll. Lib., Newburgh, NY (c) Copyright 2013. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

What makes a great athlete? Being born with talent was the traditional answer, but like so many traditions, it is under attack. In his first book, Sports Illustrated senior writer Epstein makes no secret of his debt to Malcolm Gladwell's Outliers (2008), in which the author famously argued that success owes less to inherited ability (i.e., genes) than to intense practice and circumstance (i.e., luck). While agreeing with many critics that Gladwell oversimplifies, Epstein admits that he is on to something and proceeds to apply Gladwell's approach (many scientific studies and entertaining anecdotes; lucid, accessible prose) to athletic prowess. Genes definitely contribute to great performance. Jumpers benefit if born with a longer, stiffer Achilles tendon. Baseball players have superior visual acuity, and major leaguers see better than minor leaguers. Practice definitely helps, but, ironically, the ability to benefit from training is partly inherited, as is the will to train obsessively. However, even the most dedicated athlete is out of luck without genes that produce the right body type. Africans have longer legs and slimmer hips, allowing them to run faster. Caucasians are stockier, with thicker, stronger upper bodies. Of the 81 men who have run the 100 meters in less than 10 seconds, 80 are black, but sub-Saharan Africans have never won an Olympic weight-lifting medal. Epstein turns up no single sports gene. Hundreds exist, and researchers are nowhere near understanding their interactions. They seem more essential (but still not sufficient) for physical than intellectual achievement. Readers may feel overwhelmed at Epstein's avalanche of genetic and physiological studies, but few will put down this deliciously contrarian exploration of great athletic feats.]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.