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Amazon | BN.com | BookSense

In Bookstores May 8th 2007
RETHINKING THIN
by Gina Kolata
272 Pages | ISBN: 0374103984

 

Among the many questions Gina Kolata tackles:

  • Why do people remain overweight when there is so much social pressure to be thin?
  • Why does every diet reach a plateau where weight loss stalls?
  • How important are genes in determining your weight? How important are psychological factors, like stress?
  • Is there such a thing as willpower when it comes to eating and body weight?
  • Is hunger the same experience for everyone

 

 
 


New York Times reporter Kolata may be the best writer around covering the science of health. Here she offers an eye-opening book that questions all our received wisdom about why we get fat and the health hazards of those extra pounds. In chapters equally entertaining and dismaying, Kolata (Flu), traces the history of dieting fads back to the 19th century; discusses our changing ideas about the ideal body (thinner and thinner); and, most important, explains how genetic and biochemical understanding has (at least among researchers) replaced the view of obesity as a lack of self-control. Most dramatic is Kolata’s recounting of Jeff Friedman’s groundbreaking search at Rockefeller University for the ‘satiety factor,’ a hormone he called leptin that tells our brains when we’re full. The science alternates with moving chapters in which Kolata follows a group of people in a weight-loss study who are trying desperately to get thin—a quest that, as Kolata makes increasingly clear is sadly futile. In her final—and perhaps most surprising—chapter, Kolata blasts those in the obesity industry—such as Jenny Craig and academic obesity research centers—who are invested in promoting the idea that overweight is unhealthy and diet and exercise are effective despite a raft of evidence to the contrary.

 

This book will change your thinking about weight, whether you struggle with it or not.”
Publishers Weekly

 
     
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