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Lyon's book is designed specifically with men in mind, at a time
when the number of male Pilates practitioners has rocketed to about
three million and will likely continue to grow at an exponential
rate. "The Complete Book of Pilates for Men" offers an inspiring
self-guided program that adapts to all experience levels and
requires nothing more than floor space, an exercise mat, and the
desire to look and feel your best. Lyon walks you through forty
"traditional mat" and sixty-plus "reformer on the mat" exercises,
each one brilliantly illustrated and accompanied by inspiring,
easy-to-follow instructions. While the Pilates philosophy applies
to both men and women, Lyon has tailored his program to target
trouble spots for men and help them achieve a strong, lean,
masculine aesthetic. Men tend to have more body strength, but less
integrated strength or flexibility than women; they tend to be
tighter in the shoulders, back, legs, and throughout the hips.
Following the six principles of Pilates - control, center,
concentration, precision, flow, and breath - Lyon offers a
straightforward, time-efficient program that has proven to make men
fitter, healthier, sexier, and altogether more confident. "The
Complete Book of Pilates for Men" will appeal to any man who
believes in self-empowerment and seeks a competitive edge in all
aspects of his life.
Love, sex, death, money, and dogs -- they're all here in Dan
Lyons's debut novel, "Dog Days." Lyons gives us a hip and hilarious
tale of love (both canine and carnal) and a story of revenge gone
wrong. Packing the same contemporary verve as Douglas Coupland's
"Microserfs" and the criminally black humor of Elmore Leonard and
Carl Hiaasen, "Dog Days" is a coming-of-age story that deftly deals
with the confusion, hopes, and fears that go hand-in-hand with
being smart, ambitious, and twenty-four years old.
Reilly is a software developer living in Boston's North End. He's a
young guy in a young business where the speed of change guarantees
that only the fast survive. But Reilly doesn't know how fast things
can change until he starts playing vendetta with a local mafioso.
Before this fracas got started, Reilly thought he had it made. He
had a beautiful girlfriend named Jeanie who had rowed at Harvard,
and he and his roommate, Evan, were working on a project that was
going to make them both rich. But for Reilly, the good times don't
last long. First Jeanie leaves him for one of the suits in
marketing, and then his big project falls to pieces. Then one
summer night, Reilly decides to leave his vintage BMW in Davio
Giaccalone's parking space. Naturally enough, the car ends up
tireless. Reilly vows to get revenge, and he's angry enough to do
just about anything to even the score.
With Evan's help, Reilly devises a plan to take an eye for an eye
by abducting Giaccalone's most prized possession: a gorgeous
jet-black champion racing grey-hound named Coco. When their little
prank turns into serious blackmail with thirty thousand dollars on
the line, Reilly and Evan are in way over their heads.
But with the help of their friend and neighbor, the beautiful
Maria, they manage to return the dog and collect the money, only to
have Coco lead Giaccalone and his goons right back to their
doorstep. Taking Coco with them, the three flee as far and as fast
as they can. Soon Reilly must face a showdown not only with the
mobsters but also with himself, as he has to figure out what
matters most, love or money.
This scarce antiquarian book is a selection from Kessinger
Publishing's Legacy Reprint Series. Due to its age, it may contain
imperfections such as marks, notations, marginalia and flawed
pages. Because we believe this work is culturally important, we
have made it available as part of our commitment to protecting,
preserving, and promoting the world's literature. Kessinger
Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of rare and
hard-to-find books with something of interest for everyone!
Welcome to the mind--to the world--of Fake Steve Jobs. Fake Steve
the counterintuitive management guru: "Obviously we can't literally
put our employees' lives at risk. But we have to make them feel
that way." Fake Steve the celebrity hobnobber: "I like Bono. He's
the only person I know who's more self-absorbed than I am."
"Options" is the book that had the critics howling--with
laughter:
"A voice for our own digital age....Mac-slappingly
funny."--Newsweek.com
"Hilarious."--"New York Times"
"There's a laugh-out-loud moment on nearly each one of the book's
pages."--"Wall Street Journal"
"Wickedly funny."--"San Francisco Chronicle"
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