There’s Overcoming Gravity, but it’s a static book. It has progressions, maybe a guide on how to build programs, but it’s been a while since I took a look.
I’d check out AthleanX Zero. Jeff was a physical therapist for an MLB team, and he really knows his stuff. His programs are the only ones I’ve tried that specifically trains things like rotator cuffs and such.
I only did one round of Zero before my decade overdue shoulder surgery, and it was more intense than the ones using weights.
I’ve been watching a number of his videos lately and it’s amazing how much info I’ve been learning. I’m definitely going to be making some changes to my workouts.
His bodyweight only A/B is BRUTAL. Like in a get great results but you also feel like you’re going to die way.
This will not directly answer your question but while perusing at work I came across darebee.com , which is a fitness website run like Wikipedia. There are no ads whatsoever. There’s a video library showing how to do tons of exercises. Workout programs can be filtered based on your equipment availability and ability level, and everything is available in a PDF download absolutely free.
Really cool site, give it a look.
Hey there ! I’m unfamiliard with the content of /r/BodyWeightFitness but if you are looking for guides to exercise and routines aimed at strength, I think you’ll be interrsted in this : www.hybridcalisthenics.com Very simple routine with few exercises but A LOT of varitions making it accessible to anyone. Cheers !
Edit: spelling
I really like Jeff Nippard’s YouTube channel
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I haven’t tried it yet but I’ve been recommended workout.lol It seems they have an option for bodyweight only.
I know this was controversial over at /r/BodyWeightFitness, but I had some good results with nick-e’s BWSF program. I did eventually need to modify it and split it up into an A/B routine because doing the full program took too long for me, but what nick-e put together is a really great resource. https://nick-e.com/bwsf/