
Audiobook Download Information
- Edition:
- Unabridged (Penguin Audio)
- Length:
- 6 hours, 23 minutes
- File Size:
- 175 MB (66 files)
- Published:
- January 2008
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Review by Elisa Ludwig, eMusic
If science journalist Pollan’s bestseller The Omnivore’s Dilemma detailed the industrialized food systems eroding our environment, this follow-up serves as a companion guide through the morass of the supermarket back to the eating patterns that will truly nourish us. First, though, Pollan takes aim at “nutritionism,” the Western belief system that focuses on the trees of individual nutrients as opposed to the forest of our overall diets. Take, for example, the omega-3 fatty acids that Americans tend not to eat in their natural form (fish), but instead inject into orange juice in a misguided attempt to Eat Right. The food industry, of course, has happily indulged this way of thinking, pumping out overly processed pseudo-foods that tout improbable health claims. Not exactly better living through chemistry.
Despite our interest in nutrition, Westerners are fatter and more prone to diabetes, heart disease and cancer than ever before. Pollan’s proposition is that we rethink our habits — the microwaved Hot Pockets scarfed in the car, the bingeing on low-fat/low-sugar/low-satisfaction cookies, the obsession with the antioxidant of the week — and instead return to the traditional diets of our ancestors. (Here Pollan asserts that it doesn’t matter if they were Italian or Aborigine as just about every native culture had a healthier approach to food than we do today.) Narrated evenly by Scott Brick, it’s a well-reasoned argument, as plain and sensible as a plate of broccoli.
Quotes from the Critics
"A writer of great subtlety, Pollan doesn't preach to the choir; in fact, rarely does he preach at all, preferring to let the facts speak for themselves." - Publishers Weekly
"[A] tough, witty, cogent rebuttal to the proposition that food can be reduced to its nutritional components without the loss of something essential...Other writers on food, from Barbara Kingsolver to Marion Nestle, have expressed the same alarm, but IN DEFENSE OF FOOD is an especially succinct and helpful summary." - New York Times





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