| Author/Contributor(s): | Lladó, David |
| Publisher: | Plaza & Janés |
| Date: | 11/10/2026 |
| Binding: | Paperback |
| Condition: | NEW |
Kilómetros infinitos es una narración intensa y luminosa en que David Lladó entrelaza dos viajes paralelos: el del corredor que se enfrenta al Spartathlon —246 km entre Atenas y Esparta, una de las pruebas más duras del mundo— y el del hombre que, a los cuarenta y nueve años, recibe un diagnóstico de autismo. Con una prosa precisa y emotiva, el autor transforma el running en una metáfora de la identidad y la resistencia interior: correr no es escapar, sino habitar el cuerpo, ordenar el mundo. El camino hacia Esparta —rutina, foco, silencio, resistencia— acaba siendo también una hoja de ruta íntima para vivir la diferencia sin miedo.
No es un manual de running ni un libro de autoayuda: es autobiografía, filosofía y aventura. Un libro para lectores que buscan historias reales, profundas y transformadoras.
"Porque al final, todos corremos nuestra propia carrera. Y quizás, al mostrarte la mía, encuentres una forma nueva de mirar la tuya."
ENGLISH DESCRIPTION
An ode to inner resilience and the beauty of being different: running, not to flee from autism, but to inhabit it and turn it into movement.
Infinite Miles is an intense and luminous narrative in which David Lladó intertwines two parallel journeys: that of the runner facing the Spartathlon—153 miles between Athens and Sparta, one of the toughest races in the world—and that of the man who, at forty-nine, receives a diagnosis of autism. With precise and emotive prose, the author transforms running into a metaphor for identity and inner resilience: running is not about escaping, but about inhabiting the body, bringing order to the world. The road to Sparta—routine, focus, silence, endurance—ends up being an intimate roadmap for living with difference without fear.
This is neither a running manual nor a self-help book: it is autobiography, philosophy, and adventure. A book for readers seeking real, profound, and transformative stories.
“Because in the end, we all run our own race. And perhaps by showing you mine, you’ll find a new way to look at yours.”