Start with Starting Strength. Mark Rippetoe’s book is still the default first stop for a reason, it teaches the five core barbell lifts, squat, press, deadlift, bench, power clean, with more technical precision than most in-person coaching gets you, wrapped in a simple linear progression that works because you’re weak enough for almost anything to work.
When the linear progression stops working, when you’re missing reps instead of adding them, move to Practical Programming for Strength Training. Same author, same principles, but built for the intermediate lifter who needs actual periodization instead of “add five pounds every session.” Reading these two in the wrong order wastes both of them.
If a specific lift is breaking down, technique or pain, get specific. The Squat Bible is a narrow, technical deep dive into one lift done right. Rebuilding Milo is for when the problem isn’t technique anymore, it’s training around an existing injury without losing years of progress. Daniels’ Running Formula rounds out the list as the deliberate outlier, a running-specific training book, not a lifting one, included because a serious physical-training reading list shouldn’t stop at the barbell.
Skip Starting Strength if you’re already past the beginner program and looking for more nuance, it’ll bore you. Skip Practical Programming if you haven’t stalled yet, you don’t need the complexity.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the best strength training book for a total beginner?
Starting Strength. Mark Rippetoe's beginner barbell programming book is still the standard first stop, it teaches the five core lifts with a level of technical detail most gyms never bother giving you, and pairs the technique with a simple, proven progression.
When do I move on from Starting Strength?
Once linear progression stalls, once you're not adding weight to the bar every session anymore. That's when Practical Programming for Strength Training, Rippetoe's more advanced follow-up, actually applies. Read it too early and it's mostly noise, the beginner program in Starting Strength is still doing its job.
My squat hurts. Which book should I read?
The Squat Bible first, for technique specifically. If the pain persists after fixing form, Rebuilding Milo, which is built around training around injury and pain rather than just pushing through it.
Why is a running book on a strength training list?
Daniels' Running Formula is genuinely a running book, not a lifting book, and we're upfront about that. It's grouped here because this is a comprehensive physical-training resource list, not a strictly barbell one, and Jack Daniels' training-formula approach is the same rigor applied to a different modality.