The Endurance Artist: Author Talk & Book Signing

The Endurance Artist: Author Talk & Book Signing with Jared Beasley
Thursday, Nov. 20 @ 6:30pm
Bull City Running – South Durham

The Endurance Artist is an all-access pass to the world’s most grueling races and the mastermind behind them.

Gary Cantrell, better known by the nom de guerre Lazarus Lake, has been described as a “hillbilly genius” and the “Leonardo di Vinci of pain.” His Barkley Marathons is considered the most difficult ultramarathon ever devised, a fight club in the wilderness run in secret. With books hidden in the woods, a cigarette-start, and elevation gain that amounts to summiting Mount Everest twice, the Barkley defies convention. Big’s Backyard Ultra pushes human beings to their absolute limit on a four-mile loop that is run every hour starting on the hour until there is just one runner standing–most recently, a high school teacher who ran 450 miles without sleep.

Author Jared Beasley uncovers the world of a recluse hell-bent on rewriting the rules to reveal a life reimagined and failure reinvented. Laz calls into question our obsession with winning and fairness, success and failure, and whether these ideas handicap potential.

About the Author

Jared Beasley is an author and journalist who never expected to find himself embedded in the world of ultrarunning. A former actor with a degree in theatre and literature from the University of Alabama, he brings a human perspective to a sport that is at times rife with danger and denial. His writing has appeared in The New York TimesThe GuardianCanadian RunningOutside, and he has a monthly column in Ultrarunning Magazine, “Detours of the Lost and Found.” Two of his articles made Runner’s World‘s top ten stories of the year in 2020. He’s been a featured guest on several podcasts, including UltrarunnerAuthor’s StoriesBad Boy Running, and The Shakeout Podcast.

Jared Beasley is an author and journalist who never expected to find himself embedded in the world of ultrarunning. A former actor with a degree in theatre and literature from The University of Alabama, he brings a human perspective to a sport that is at times rife with danger and denial. His writing has appeared in The New York TimesThe GuardianCanadian RunningOutside, and he has a monthly column in Ultrarunning Magazine, “Detours of the Lost and Found.” Two of his articles made Runner’s World’s top ten stories of the year in 2020. He’s been a featured guest on several podcasts, including UltrarunnerAuthor’s StoriesBad Boy Running, and The Shakeout Podcast.