Gnar Country: Growing Old, Staying Rad

· HarperAudio · Narrated by James Patrick Cronin
1.5
2 reviews
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7 hr 38 min
Unabridged
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About this audiobook

The New York Times bestselling author and human performance expert tests his knowledge and theories on his own aging body in a quest to become an expert skier at age fifty-three.

Gnar: adjective, short for “gnarly,” def: any environment or situation that is high in perceived risk and high in actual risk.

Country: noun, def: any defined territory, landscape or terrain, fictitious or real.

Cutting-edge discoveries in embodied cognition, flow science, and network neuroscience have revolutionized how we think about peak performance aging. On paper, these discoveries should allow older athletes to progress in supposedly “impossible” activities like park skiing (think: jumps and tricks.) To see if theory worked in practice, Kotler conducted his own ass-on-the-line experiment in applied neuroscience and later-in-life skill acquisition: He tried to teach an old dog some new tricks.

Recently, top pros have been performing well past a previously considered prime: World-class athletes such as Kelly Slater, the greatest surfer of all time, is winning competitions in his fifties; Tom Brady can beat players half his age. But what about the rest of us?

Steven Kotler has been studying human performance for thirty years, and taught hundreds of thousands of people at all skill levels, age groups, and walks of life, how to achieve peak performance. Could his own advice work for him?

Gnar Country is the chronicle of his experience pushing his own aging body past preconceived limits. It’s a book about goals and grit and progression. It’s an antidote for weariness that is inspiring, practical, and, often hilarious. It is about growing old and staying rad. It’s a feverish reading experience that makes you put down the book, get out there, and move. Whether hurtling down a mountain side, running your first 10K race, or taking your career to new heights, Kotler challenges us to test ourselves, surpass our limits, and achieve our own impossible, whatever it might be. Part personal journey, part science experiment, part how-to guide, Kotler takes us on his punk rock, high-velocity joy-ride for a better life in spite—and often in defiance of—the perceived limitations of the aging human body.

Supplemental enhancement PDF accompanies the audiobook.

Ratings and reviews

1.5
2 reviews
Jake M-K
November 26, 2023
This is unfortunately yet another audiobook to add to the plethora of audiobooks with suboptimal narration where the narrator's tone is too low energy and slightly monotone because they are trying to sound professional and perfect but they are forgetting to sound real and energized about the material and thus are not really communicating emotionally and aurally what they are reading because they are more focused on sounding perfect. I cannot listen to a voice like that for 9 hours because it is basically phony, not real. The worst part is that it's literally harder to listen to and harder to absorb what they're saying so it's basically counterproductive and would be an annoying challenge to force myself to listen to it in terms of trying to absorb the material. The same is true for the narrator in The Art of Impossible by Kotler. Steven, please read it yourself or have Rian or somebody who understands the material and is excited about it redo your audiobooks.
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Bruce Wileman
March 26, 2023
This book is mostly about skiing. To be fair, the author does warn the reader about this, however it should really be marketed as a skiing book with a little bit of psychology of peak performance aging thrown in. Really, the author should have made too books, one for people with an interest in skiing and a second condensed one focusing on psychology and peak performance aging science, mostly consisting of the current book's final chapter and appendix, with some occasional reference to skiing thrown in. So if you're more interested in the science and not as much in skiing, I wouldn't bother with this book (unless you're prepared to pay full price for just the last chapter or so).
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About the author

Steven Kotler is a New York Times bestselling author, an award-winning journalist, and the executive director of the Flow Research Collective. He is one of the world’s leading experts on human performance. He is the author of eleven bestsellers (out of fourteen books total), including The Art of Impossible, The Future Is Faster Than You Think, Stealing Fire, and The Rise of Superman. His work has been nominated for two Pulitzer Prizes, has been translated into more than fifty languages, and has appeared in more than one hundred publications, including the New York Times Magazine, Wired, the Atlantic, Time, and the Harvard Business Review. Steven is also the cohost of Flow Research Collective Radio, a top ten iTunes science podcast. Whenever possible, he can be found hurling himself down mountains at high speeds.

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Narrated by James Patrick Cronin