2,100 Asanas: The Complete Yoga Poses
E**A
One of the best complete, modern, asana book manuals
I am a yoga teacher and we are told about thousands of yoga poses that exist. However in 500 hours spent in yoga teacher training program. I may say I learned probably a hundreds of yoga poses and I am no where near knowing a thousands of them, let alone 2,100. For that reason I was excited to find this book and buy it.This is why this book is so valuable. It is a great reference book. I ordered my copy in hardcover, so it will not bend or assume unseemly shapes. Book is made of high quality paper and has fantastic photography pictures of each and every pose demonstrated by very experienced practitioners/teachers. Author of the book is Canadian yogi who dedicated his life teaching yoga and he thought yoga to many athletes over his career. Most of the poses are demonstrated by female practitioners but there are a few male practitioners and they all look amazing. Each pose has a name in Sanscrit and English and description of it. I want to thank Daniel Lacerda for creating one of the most precious asana books that compiles all 2,100 poses that I could find in 10 years of practicing yoga.The introduction to the book is vry thoughtful and also gives a brief description of yoga philosophy. People unfamiliar with yoga will be surprised to learn that yoga is so much more than a physical practice.
B**B
Love it.
I've been doing yoga for six months and decided to get a couple books. This one is great, it's more like a few hundred poses with many variations. It's a high quality book for a great price. Some of the poses will make you laugh, think, cry inside or make you want to go further into your practice. Good times!
V**S
Tons of brand new fun poses!
I'm a yoga teacher and this is my favorite yoga book of all. I love learning and teaching new poses and my students seem to enjoy learning new ones too. Most yoga classes seem to stick to the same poses but I enjoy variety. I also love that names of poses are in English and Sanskrit; I hate having to try and find out what a pose written in only Sanskrit means. The photos are all beautiful and not difficult to figure out the body placement, unlike most yoga books. I also love that it's not redundant using lots of pages to explain yogic spiritual beliefs. I wanted a book with lots of new poses, easy to see the poses, and this is it. If it had explained how to get into the poses the book would be soooo thick and heavy and it's already thick and heavy enough. My favorite yoga book with 100 regular yoga poses that explains them the best is Yoga the top 100 best yoga poses. It'd be awesome if the 2100 asanas author put together some books explaining how to get into the poses, I'd buy them. But for now I'm in love with this book and it's going to make yoga practices even more fun.
S**S
Pretzeled my life
Listen, you will NEVER be able to boss-battle this book. It will ALWAYS be a huge resource for you and your practice and is unlikely to catch dust if you're actually curious about expanding your practice. This book has me pretzel-ing (YES ITS A VERB NOW) myself into the weirdest configurations, & I've been surprised by the areas of flexibility I've discovered... as well as the areas of resistance - HOW INSIGHTFUL. It gives solid info on each pose but brief enough to get the gist fast. Just impulse-buy this. I highly doubt you'll remember this purchase as one of life's big regrets.
T**T
Not what I expected, but great resource
I gave up on yoga years ago and have just recently gotten back into it. My flexibility is pretty much shot, as should be expected with years of neglecting mobility and yet tightening muscles through exercise. This book was recommended to me for modifications. Clearly, the person who recommended it for modifications defines "modifications" differently than I do (it was an online recommendation). I wanted modifications that would slowly step you into the full pose - modifications that usually use props to aid your flexibility (like using a blocm to reach the floor in triangle). This book does not have that. I would say it shows the "basic" poses as mostly shown here in the States with lots of ways to advance the pose, or adjust the effects on the body. There are lots of variations on the poses, binds to include, etc. Beautiful to look at, but definitely for someone with high flexibility. For me, at my level of flexibility, it will be more of a picture book. I do like that the postures mark which Chakras they affect. I've had a hard time getting that information at times. I also like thay the English and Sanskrit names are included. However a lot of the English names were not the same as the ones I know (actually common with all the different types of yoga). The book is way thicker than I expected. I failed to read the details and that it is 700+ pages. Still happy with my purchase though as it will be a great resource in my future and it is inspiring.
A**A
THE one
Beautiful book and gift for anyone who wants to take a yoga practice as far as possible. The full color photos are excellent and show the poses correctly executed. The descriptions are succinct.Each pose has a brief description that identifies the chakras that the pose targets and the emphasis on specific body points. Pose photos are also grouped together from the initial easy pose through its progressive variations of difficulty. Grouping the photos this way allows for fluid movements from pose initiation into its most advanced position based on physical abilities.CAVEAT: the book's not for beginners. The best beginner books are those by Richard Hittleman and available inexpensively on Amazon. Beginners are also well served by attending regular yoga classes designed for beginners and not in mixed ability classes. One of the points of yoga is to work based on physical abilities. Yoga isn't about pain, it's about the daily work of mental and physical progression.Many thanks to Mr. Yoga, Daniel Lacerda, for this comprehensive book. We like it so much that we have 2 copies.
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