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Fat Land
Greg Critser
其他書名
How Americans Became the Fattest People in the World
出版
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
, 2004
主題
Health & Fitness / Diet & Nutrition / Diets
Health & Fitness / Exercise / General
Health & Fitness / Healthy Living & Personal Hygiene
Health & Fitness / Diet & Nutrition / Nutrition
Medical / Health Policy
Medical / Public Health
Medical / Bariatrics
Self-Help / Personal Growth / Happiness
Self-Help / Personal Growth / Self-Esteem
Self-Help / Personal Growth / Success
Self-Help / Personal Growth / Memory Improvement
Social Science / Customs & Traditions
Social Science / Agriculture & Food
ISBN
9780618380602
0618380604
URL
http://books.google.com.hk/books?id=lh3I7thy_R0C&hl=&source=gbs_api
EBook
SAMPLE
註釋
Fat land highlights the groundbreaking research that implicates cheap fats and sugars as the alarming new metabolic factor making our calories stick and shows how and why children are too often the chief metabolic victims of such foods. No one else writing on fat America takes as hard a line as Critser on the institutionalized lies we've been telling ourselves about how much we can eat and how little we can exercise. His expose of the Los Angeles schools' opening of the nutritional floodgates in the lunchroom and his examination of the political and cultural forces that have set the bar on American fitness low and then lower, are both discerning reporting and impassioned wake-up calls. Disarmingly funny, Fat land leaves no diet book - including Dr. Atkins's - unturned. Fashions, both leisure and street, and American-style religion are subject to Critser's gimlet eye as well. Memorably, Fat land takes on baby-boomer parenting shibboleths - that young children won't eat past the point of being full and that the dinner table isn't the place to talk about food rules - and gives advice many families will use to lose. Critser's futuristic portrait of a Fat America just around the corner and his all too contemporary foray into the diabetes ward of a major children's hospital make Fat land a chilling but brilliantly rendered portrait of the cost in human lives - many of them very young lives - of America's obesity epidemic.