Growing up, Miriam is an average athlete who doesn’t get much playing time. She never imagines becoming a runner. But a college breakup propels her to run to mend her broken heart. She begins running 5K races. These races morph into half-marathons and marathons. Years later, running helps her to cope with the workplace mistreatment she is enduring as an academic and the depression she suffers.
After watching Dean Karnazes and Pam Reed on 60 Minutes talk about ultrarunning, Miriam signs up for the JFK 50 ultra. With the love and support of her family, she runs an ultramarathon every year. A few years later, Miriam is unable to run normally until she is diagnosed with neurological B12 deficiency and gets her running legs back.
Three days after placing third female in a twenty-four-hour ultramarathon, Miriam’s scheduled laparoscopic hysterectomy is only the beginning of her medical and surgical nightmare. When her husband Jon is diagnosed with stage four cancer, Miriam runs ultramarathons for his healing.
In Come What May, I Want to Run, the reader keeps pace with Miriam as she overcomes adversity, and her unrelenting faith, perseverance, resiliency, and running ultramarathons never waiver.
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Miriam Diaz-Gilbert’s book, Come What May, I Want to Run: A Memoir of the Saving Grace of Ultrarunning in Overwhelming Times, was selected by Martha Hughes, host of Martha Runs the World podcast, as one of her favorite running books. Chris Ward, host of the Like a Bigfoot podcast interviewed Diaz-Gilbert about Come What May, I Want to Run and her writing process. Ron Meyer, host of EWTN’s Blessed2Play radio show interviewed Diaz-Gilbert’s about two major themes in Come What May, I Want to Run— her Catholic faith and running, and how she integrates both in her quest to pursue incredible feats of endurance.