Starting Strength: Basic Barbell Training

Mark Rippetoe

Pages

347

Year

2011

Difficulty

Moderate

Themes

barbell training, squat, deadlift, bench press, programming

The single most important book on barbell training ever written. Rippetoe doesn’t just tell you what exercises to do. He explains exactly how to perform them, why the biomechanics work the way they do, and how to build a program that makes you stronger week after week.

Why Start Here

Most fitness books give you a workout plan and wish you luck. Starting Strength does something fundamentally different: it teaches you how the squat, deadlift, bench press, overhead press, and power clean actually work as movements. Rippetoe breaks down each lift with the precision of an engineering manual, explaining joint angles, muscle recruitment, and bar path in language that a complete beginner can follow.

What makes this the right first book is its clarity about fundamentals. You will learn why the squat is the most important exercise in the weight room, why grip width matters on the bench press, and why your deadlift setup determines whether you lift the weight or hurt your back. The programming section is equally valuable: a simple, linear progression that adds weight to the bar every session, designed specifically for people who have never trained with barbells before.

What to Expect

Dense, detailed chapters on five core lifts, with over 750 illustrations showing correct and incorrect form. The second half covers programming, warm-ups, and common problems. This is not a book you skim. You read a chapter, go to the gym, practice the lift, and come back to reread it. Many lifters return to it for years.

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