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Martin Bright

ByMartin Bright, Martin Bright

Opinion

The Jews who taught me to run

June 6, 2012 16:08
3 min read

I have always been influenced by Jewish writers, from the biblical authors of my secular-Anglican childhood to an adolescence dominated by Franz Kafka and Leonard Cohen. One of the first books I reviewed in the mid-1980s was Primo Levi's The Drowned and The Saved, which probably did more to form my political outlook than any other work of non-fiction. David Grossman and Aharon Appelfeld taught me about Israel. I was late to discover Philip Roth, but now he is teaching me about America.

In journalism, too, Jewish writers have also been an inspiration. It is a tribute to the intellectual life of the UK community that, when I judged the Orwell Prize it would have been possible to fill the entire longlist with Jews.

So I had always assumed Jewish writers would influence my writing. But when I picked up the Guardian last July, I had not the slightest inkling of the effect two Jewish writers were about to have on my physical and psychological well-being. The paper had commissioned a feature entitled "Why I Run" in which writers had confessed to their running addictions. Jon Ronson wrote that he had been running every day since he met George Clooney and noticed that he was considerably less trim than the star. He talked about running for 40 minutes in one go and unfeasible distances of four miles a day. He claimed he had shed a beer-belly and even outrun muggers in New York.

Something clicked. Could it be true? Was it possible for a middle-aged man to run for more than a few minutes at a time?