There's nothing quite like reading a runner's journey learning to run – and to live – like a Greek. That's how and why I borrowed the book The Art of Running by Andrea Marcolongo, who learned Ancient Greek at her liceo classico at the age of fourteen, and started her instinct to run along the Seine at the age of thirty-two.
The author experienced the vital impulse at a similar age as Haruki Murakami (who started to run at the age of thirty-three, the age that Jesus Christ died, the age that Scott Fitzgerald started to go downhill). That has a lot to do with the fear of aging. She trained hard to run the marathon in Marathon. For history buffs and runners, the small town of Marathon needs little introduction; this is where the Athenian herald Pheidippides had started his run to Athens. Andrea Marcolongo insisted on running to see the Giants and Lapiths atop the Parthenon with her own two eyes, standing on her own two legs.
I love the way Andrea Marcolongo described running: that is her way to prove that she still has time, that adulthood (read: old age) is relative, that there is no end to youth if we dedicate ourselves to staying in shape.