Greg Sushinsky Bodybuilding
Fitness, Nutrition & Health
The Natural Bodybuilding Training Manual Training Wisdom
Muscle, Smoke & Mirrors The Yukon Hercules The Muscle Shoppe Greg Sushinsky Bio
Copyright, Greg Sushinsky
Review of Clarence Bass' new book
Great Expectations
review by Greg Sushinsky
The bold though partially hidden display of a lean, taut
nude figure of a man, which carefully reveals, yet tastefully
conceals via shadow, the physique of one of the greatest
practitioners of physical culture in our modern day, is the
first thing that strikes you about Clarence Bass’ new book,
“Great Expectations".  The cover art is a fine choice for
the book, part suggestive of bodybuilding, part fitness, part
art, and stands at a kind of a junction between all these,
maybe fusing them for a moment in a way that is both
startling  and welcome at this point in the history of
bodybuilding and fitness, invoking the spirit of  true
physical culture.   The striking character of the front cover
is balanced out by the friendly, informal welcoming photo
of Bass on the back, as the cover notes clearly announce
what he and the book are about: It is a package that points
beyond mere bodybuilding and even fitness, and points to
a celebration, an updating and bringing into the 21st
century a new physical culture.  The front cover photo by
Laszlo Bencze, though, and many other photos by him
throughout the book, announce well that this is not just
another bodybuilding or fitness book.

Clarence Bass is a well-known, significant name in the
fitness field, best known in bodybuilding.  He is at this
writing just turned age 70, is a  former lawyer, has been a
successful high-school athlete, an Olympic lifting
champion, a title-winning bodybuilder, who champions
exercise, fitness,
nutrition and health in a lifelong way which outshines all previous limiting categories of these topics.  Known in his
bodybuilding incarnation  for his “Ripped” physique, many readers will recognize Bass for his human-anatomy-chart
extreme definition which he still wears as his body, a badge from his ceaseless devotion over the years to his craft, a
craft which is far beyond bodybuilding and fitness and for which there is truly no category, though physical culture
would come closest.  Bass is also a prolific writer, author of eight excellent books who wrote the Ripped Department
column for Muscle & Fitness magazine for 16 years.

While some may be initially put off by the unusual photo of Bass on the cover, it is a cover that may one day become—
should become—a classic in physical culture.  Also, the subtitle, “Health, Fitness, Leanness, Without Suffering,” is
pointed, direct, and perhaps ground breaking as well.  Some of the material within the pages has been touched upon
or at least hinted at by Bass in his other writings, but the value in this book is both the elaboration and the organic way
in which it’s organized and written.  Though the book is read best in order (a logical approach, no?), once read, you
can go back to many of the sections which do double-duty and can stand also on their own.

The book begins with an overview highlighting Clarence Bass’ approach, which invokes a connected spirit of attitude
and action married to positive anticipation of results; it is a theme of engagement that will wind through the whole work
as he shows you how he does this and how you can too. He then launches into two chapters the likes of which you don’
t usually find in fitness and certainly bodybuilding books.  These two chapters cover Bass’ medical encounters with hip
replacement and bladder surgery.  What makes these chapters different is that candid  medical experiences are
seldom included in the super-human writings of most athletes, rarely in bodybuilding and fitness circles, and are rarer
still drenched in the kind of naked honesty that Clarence provides.  Chapter three, detailing his problems and
subsequent treatment for his bladder problem, capture the fear, anxiety, aloneness and frustration that we all nearly
universally come up against at some time in our lives when faced with medical problems.  It is a tribute to Bass’ honesty
that he includes this, and the way he does again vaults the book far beyond the mere fitness category.

The heart of the how-to then begins with Bass detailing the hows and whys of weight loss, metabolism, exercise and
eating.  One of the best things Bass does as an author is share stories and approaches of others, giving them the
limelight, sharing what Clarence has learned from even ordinary practitioners of the art of leanness, exercise and
health.  He details practical ways to achieve and maintain fat loss that work for many, and that are sustainable without
heroic effort.

The exercise Rx follows suit.  Bass explains the whys and whats of exercise and how his own approach has evolved,
and how yours can, too, into a reasonably intense but neither time-consuming regimen nor killing effort that will take
care of both strength and cardiovascular training, the twin pillars of importance for best exercise results.  Further
chapters elaborate on the exercise approach in greater detail, with more background and some scientific citing.

The center of Bass’ ways involve a consistent whole food, low fat nutritional approach, which for him is a way of eating,
not a diet.  He is, in his words, anti-diet, instead counseling to develop a consistent, gradual approach to losing weight
and body fat.  He also goes into great detail showing how he applies his principles to his own eating and how this fits
into his lifestyle as a part of it, not its sum or totality.  The whole idea is to live a full life, to enjoy your eating and
exercising, not to work excessively hard, and not to suffer (remember the sub-title?).  Even his chapter on reaching a
physical peak, chapter seven, where he shows you how he goes about his preparation for elite-level leanness and
physique training, illustrate these ideas in action.

There is more than this, even.  Clarence Bass, via photographer Laszlo Bencze, shares photos and writings of days of
his personal life with his wife Carol, which shows how Clarence integrates these physical culture principles into his daily
living and also gives us a glimpse into the wider personality that Clarence is other than the fitness persona part.  Bass
the image becomes a more fleshed-out, multi-dimensional man in this.

There are some criticisms to make of the book, the foremost one being that those who are non-exercisers with serious
weight problems are likely to find Bass’ example a bit daunting, if not intimidating.  Clarence does his best to invite
them in, quell their fears, and to encourage them; there’s not much else he can do.  Also, sometimes Bass relies a bit
too much on citing the scientific underpinnings in his discussion.  It can be helpful, yet to those unconvinced it will be
meaningless, to those already convinced, unnecessary.  One thought to keep in mind: Bass has a definite point of
view that falls along the spectrum of silent (or otherwise) arguing in the fitness world: he is a staunch proponent of low-
fat living, though without over-simplifying, he does briefly offer a discussion if not a nod of acknowledgement for those
who prefer the nearly opposite, the low-carb approach.

Small criticisms aside, you will find wonderful things here:  Bass’ personal adventure into leanness, the things he
shows and teaches, the shared, encouraging joyful nature of his path, such things as the spotlight on Nils Wikstrom, a
friend of Clarence’s whose own unique yet compatible views of fitness illustrate Clarence’s own tolerant approach, and
the many friends Clarence cites that he’s made and who in turn encourage him in his own fitness endeavors.  This is in
some way the heart of the book: encouragement.

Clarence Bass is not only a passionate advocate for healthy exercise and nutrition, but is an ardent, expert practitioner
of same and an articulate, highly intelligent spokesman for it.  This comes shining through the book.  It is in its sinews
and corpuscles, in much the same way that Clarence has stamped these practices into the sinews and corpuscles of
his own body and life.  So, too, there is a “more than” here, which is that the book is more than merely an abstract
treatise on leanness and exercise, it is also the encounter with a man who has rather than just observing, plunged
deep into the adventure, and along the way communicated with relish the joy and struggles of this journey to his fellow
beings.  We are the richer for his experiences.  

© Greg Sushinsky

www.gregsushinsky.com
Read Greg's review of
The Third Ripped DVD:  Motivation, With Clarence Bass
ORDER YOUR COPY
NOW!

$24.95
US
PLUS S&H
Great Expectations:
Health Fitness Leanness
Without Suffering
by Clarence Bass
Paperback
Published: December 2007
Language: English
163 pages
size: 6" X 9" X 1/2"
$24.95 + $5 shipping
total $29.95US
US & Canada
$24.95 + $11 shipping
total $35.95US
International
Buy Now with PayPal
More Ordering Info
see below