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The Big Fat Surprise: Why Butter, Meat and Cheese Belong in a Healthy Diet Hardcover – May 13, 2014

4.7 4.7 out of 5 stars 4,024 ratings


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Review

"A wonderful book [that] takes on everything we think we know about nutrition and examines it.." (Ruth Reichl, former editor-in-chief, Gourmet magazine)

About the Author

Nina Teicholz is an investigative science journalist and author as well as an advocate for evidence-based nutrition policy. Her work has appeared in The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, The Independent, The Atlantic, and The New Yorker, among other places. She grew up in Berkeley, California, and now lives in New York.

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Simon & Schuster; First Edition (May 13, 2014)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Hardcover ‏ : ‎ 496 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 1451624425
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1451624427
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 1.74 pounds
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 6.25 x 1.5 x 9.25 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.7 4.7 out of 5 stars 4,024 ratings

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Nina Teicholz
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Nina Teicholz is an investigative science journalist and author. Her international bestseller, The Big Fat Surprise has upended the conventional wisdom on dietary fat--especially saturated fat--and has challenged the very core of our nutrition policy.

The executive editor of "The Lancet" wrote, "this is a disquieting book about scientific incompetence, evangelical ambition, and ruthless silencing of dissent that has shaped our lives for decades…researchers, clinicians, and health policy advisors should read this provocative book. ”A review in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition said, “This book should be read by every scientist…[and] every nutritional science professional.” In the BMJ (British Medical Journal), the journal's former editor wrote, “Teicholz has done a remarkable job in analysing [the] weak science, strong personalities, vested interests, and political expediency” of nutrition science.

The Big Fat Surprise was named a 2014 *Best Book* by The Economist, the Wall Street Journal, Forbes, Mother Jones, and Library Journal. It was named one of the best Nutrition audiobooks of all time" by BookAuthority.

Teicholz's writing has also been published in The BMJ, The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, The Atlantic, The Independent, and The New Yorker, among others. In addition, Teicholz is the Executive Director of The Nutrition Coalition, a non-profit group that promotes evidence-based nutrition policy. She has testified before the Canadian Senate and U.S. Department of Agriculture about the need for reform of dietary guidelines.

Teicholz attended Yale and Stanford where she studied biology and majored in American Studies. She has a master’s degree from Oxford University and served as associate director of the Center for Globalization and Sustainable Development at Columbia University.

A former vegetarian of 25+ years, from Berkeley, CA, Teicholz now lives in New York city with her husband and two sons.

Customer reviews

4.7 out of 5 stars
4.7 out of 5
4,024 global ratings
The Madness of Crowds - Explained
5 Stars
The Madness of Crowds - Explained
The Big Fat Surprise – Book Review“Taubes work as a science journalist had won him many awards, including three science-in-society awards from the National Association of Science Writers, the most that the group allows for any single science reporter. Yet roughly two thirds of my interviews with nutrition experts began with something like: “If you are taking the Gary Taubes line, then I’d rather not talk to you.” (Teicholz 313)“Only carbohydrates have been shown, in clinical experiments, to be the likely principal cause of obesity, heart disease, and diabetes.” (Teicholz 335)---------------After reading both Nina Teicholz The Big Fat Surprise (and Gary Taubes’ The Case Against Sugar), it is impossible to think of ‘experts’ as anything but. It turns out they are as flawed as the rest of us, able to be wrong on levels unimaginable. Teicholz book is a ‘nutritional thriller’, complete with heroes and villains, unfortunately the villains won, to the detriment of the American people.I grew up during the low-fat era. Low fat Yogurt and milk, vegetarianism, veganism, ‘fat free’ and ‘heart healthy’ were all products and terms that were used to not only increase sales, but also to inform you that what you were eating was healthy, because it was low in fat. “Fat, particularly animal fat, is bad; too much of it will cause heart disease.” This is what we were told, and everyone knew it to be true.But did they? People assumed that both the food corporations, scientists, and the government were acting upon scientifically backed knowledge that showed that the increase in heart disease among westerners, particularly Americans, was due to eating too much meat. It turns out that this was wrong. A combination of bad science, strong personalities, assumptions, flawed studies and societal inertia created a movement that is probably responsible for the premature deaths of millions.Ancel Keys, the main villain in The Big Fat Surprise, was a scientist who assumed that because Americans were having more heart disease and heart attacks, meat and fat must be the culprit, as Americans eat a lot of meat. Keys did what many arrogant and intelligent people do; he figured out the solution first, and then tried to force the hypothesis, epidemiological studies, and successive experiments into the predetermined result.Two instances are noteworthy, both described in detail by Teicholz. Keys ran the ‘Seven Countries Study – a massive analysis of the eating habits of those in seven chosen countries. Oddly, he left out France, a country where meat and cheese are eaten regularly. No coherent explanation was ever given as to why France was left off the list. Not only was France not included, the data was cherry picked by Keys, and none of it showed that a low-fat diet had any effect on total mortality. Teicholz did what thousands of scientists, politicians, writers and opinion makers after Keys did not do – she looked over the Seven Countries study data carefully and saw that it did not fit Keys’ thesis: that a low-fat diet was healthier.The second instance, an astounding example of confirmation bias, was the Minnesota Coronary Survey. In 1968, biochemist Ivan Franz fed 9000 men and women in six Minnesota state mental hospitals select food, lowering the saturated fat for one group, and having the control group maintain a diet of “traditional American foods.” Because the subjects were hospitalized, the experiment was more controlled than most. After four and a half years, the diet low in saturated fat had failed to show any health advantage at all. Franz then proceeded to sit on the results for sixteen years, and eventually published them in a sparsely read medical journal. When asked why he did this he said, “We were just disappointed in the way it came out.” In addition to not releasing the results because of “disappointment”, the group that ate a low-fat diet had higher rates of cancer, although the study does not say if the number was statistically significant.Teicholz, in a 340-page book that took her 10 years to write, goes into great detail about what should be considered a 50-year example of bad science, biased reporting, and deadly assumptions. The scientists who dared to swim against the current of the ‘diet heart’ (low fat) zeitgeist were pilloried, blacklisted and shunned. Even diet doctors with considerable success such as Dr. Robert Atkins and Pete Ahrens were never given a fair hearing, because ‘everybody knew’ their conclusions were wrong. The Establishment created a consensus out of nothing, and attacked those who went against the ‘consensus’.In giving Atkins, Ahrens and others a fair hearing, Teicholz has done society a great service. Unlike the so-called nutritional authorities and pundits, she has probably saved lives. That her stance, and her book still rankle the Nutritional Establishment is a testament to her resolve, and people’s ability to ignore those who are brave enough to tell us that the emperor has no clothes.“Men, it has been well said, think in herds; it will be seen that they go mad in herds, while they only recover their senses slowly, one by one.” – Charles Mackay, Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds 
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