I thought there were some great smoothie recipes, but the other recipes are like "Better Homes and Gardens"-ish.
I do have two issues with this book. First, I am so sick of diet books that start with diet-bashing and then offer up a diet of their own. Yes, diets don't achieve results long-term, and they are expensive and time-consuming to maintain, and inconvenient, and the research says for these reasons and more that diets don't work. And the answer to this problem is . . . "The Body Reset (TM) Diet"!! Which, as it turns out, is a DIET. Eat three smoothies and two snacks a day, 1200 calories total, and slowly replace two of those shakes with a healthy meal over a three week period. Maybe it works for some, doesn't for others, fine. But this is a diet, so let's make sure we call it that.
Second, -- this sounds persnickety, but it's really not -- footnotes would have been so much better than end notes. This book is tiny with basically 150 pages of text (and that includes the diagrams of the exercises, so not a ton of words), easy enough for a 5th grader to understand. But the format already crowds the latter half, with recipes, an index, and several appendices -- and the citations don't contain much commentary. Just put them in the body of the text, for the love, so the reader doesn't have to keep flipping back and forth to see what studies matter to this particular author.
That is all.