HomeGroupsTalkMoreZeitgeist
Search Site
This site uses cookies to deliver our services, improve performance, for analytics, and (if not signed in) for advertising. By using LibraryThing you acknowledge that you have read and understand our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy. Your use of the site and services is subject to these policies and terms.

Results from Google Books

Click on a thumbnail to go to Google Books.

Gene Eating: The science of obesity and the…
Loading...

Gene Eating: The science of obesity and the truth about diets (edition 2018)

by Giles Yeo (Author)

MembersReviewsPopularityAverage ratingMentions
1911,135,847 (4.5)1
Yeo admits early on Gene Eating is an anti-diet book. So the readership of this work can be divided in two, and which group you belong to will determine how you react. Either you are following or considering one of the popular diets Yeo disparages, in which case you are either convinced and enlightened or venting in disbelief at Yeo's callous attacks. Or, like me, you aren't looking to change your diet but are interested in a fresh scientific view on nutrition. This second lay audience may appreciate Yeo's wide-ranging explanations:

- calorie content is less important than caloric availability, which varies widely by food type and preparation technique;
- animals are wired to defend their weight or weight progression (mice experiments, restrictive human diets difficult to maintain);
- natural selection shapes diets over long periods (amylase gene copies, alcohol tolerance, regional lactose intolerance);
- humans and animals have evolved to prefer more calorically dense foods as they become full ("dessert stomach");
- how and where fat is stored differs significantly due to genetic variation (variable link to diabetes for specific ethnicities);
- hormones influencing how full you feel are sensitive to where your digestive tract is active and consequently to what types of food you eat (proteins are filling as they are digested later in the alimentary canal).

According to Yeo, studies support only two sustainable dietary means of tackling obesity: fasting (which can be explained by scientific reasoning) and the Mediterranean diet (though reasons for its efficacy have yet to be isolated). Crucially, the reason why a number of diets seem to work, at least initially, is that they cause weight loss, which can be achieved directly through fasting. Exercise is useful in maintaining but not instigating weight loss.

I would have preferred more of the above, less chat, less emphasis on why diet fads X and Y are misleading or dangerous. But I appreciate to sell a book you have to attract and affect an audience. The editing is poor, but overall I found Gene Eating an accessible and well researched introduction to nutrition in the context of today's first world obesity epidemic. ( )
  jigarpatel | Jun 10, 2019 |
Yeo admits early on Gene Eating is an anti-diet book. So the readership of this work can be divided in two, and which group you belong to will determine how you react. Either you are following or considering one of the popular diets Yeo disparages, in which case you are either convinced and enlightened or venting in disbelief at Yeo's callous attacks. Or, like me, you aren't looking to change your diet but are interested in a fresh scientific view on nutrition. This second lay audience may appreciate Yeo's wide-ranging explanations:

- calorie content is less important than caloric availability, which varies widely by food type and preparation technique;
- animals are wired to defend their weight or weight progression (mice experiments, restrictive human diets difficult to maintain);
- natural selection shapes diets over long periods (amylase gene copies, alcohol tolerance, regional lactose intolerance);
- humans and animals have evolved to prefer more calorically dense foods as they become full ("dessert stomach");
- how and where fat is stored differs significantly due to genetic variation (variable link to diabetes for specific ethnicities);
- hormones influencing how full you feel are sensitive to where your digestive tract is active and consequently to what types of food you eat (proteins are filling as they are digested later in the alimentary canal).

According to Yeo, studies support only two sustainable dietary means of tackling obesity: fasting (which can be explained by scientific reasoning) and the Mediterranean diet (though reasons for its efficacy have yet to be isolated). Crucially, the reason why a number of diets seem to work, at least initially, is that they cause weight loss, which can be achieved directly through fasting. Exercise is useful in maintaining but not instigating weight loss.

I would have preferred more of the above, less chat, less emphasis on why diet fads X and Y are misleading or dangerous. But I appreciate to sell a book you have to attract and affect an audience. The editing is poor, but overall I found Gene Eating an accessible and well researched introduction to nutrition in the context of today's first world obesity epidemic. ( )
  jigarpatel | Jun 10, 2019 |

Current Discussions

None

Popular covers

Quick Links

Rating

Average: (4.5)
0.5
1
1.5
2
2.5
3
3.5
4 1
4.5
5 1

Is this you?

Become a LibraryThing Author.

 

About | Contact | Privacy/Terms | Help/FAQs | Blog | Store | APIs | TinyCat | Legacy Libraries | Early Reviewers | Common Knowledge | 203,200,419 books! | Top bar: Always visible