3.5 stars.
Let’s say now first (in case you don’t want to read the whole review), that this is in my opinion a good book, but more of a companion-book to read after Dr Greger’s “How Not To Die” – a good book confirming from its own angle what that other book says better. The rest of why I put in the reasons-whys below.
My book is the revised and expanded edition, which brings the study more up-to-date and adds interesting stuff. The argument of the book is that the ‘whole food, plants-based’ (WFPB) diet is the answer to better, healthier life, and that it can prevent, reverse, or make an illness less severe, and keep us energized and moving long into the old age. If you’re just looking for what this diet includes, go to Chapter 12, or get the China Study Solution book for more expanded vision of the diet.
The book is divided into four parts, plus three appendixes. The first part introduces the subject, talks about protein, cancer, and the China Study itself; as with part four, we become familiar also with our authors’ work (especially the older one of these two). The second part talks about the diseases of affluence, and the third part (also the thinnest) talks about the WFPB diet. Finally there is the fourth part that talks about why we rarely (or not at all) hear about the benefits of this diet (or ones very similar); this part shows the most the books US-centeredness, so what the situation is in other countries may not be as severe, or can be different at least a bit.
Reasons why 3.5 not 3
- we get another angle on why choosing to eliminate animal proteins from our life is good, and are shown new (or newish-to-us) studies we might have not known of
- reading about the older author’s experiences in both studying things and his frustrations in battling hiding and opposition is a good idea to include (of course)
- the WFPB diet is easy to make vegan, and there’s freedom to make it look like yours
- it shows that our genes determine our fate only 2-3%: our diet can dictate how active these genes can become
- I learned new things (that dairy can make the beginning of menstruation earlier, and menopause later, how harmful low-carb diets really can be – thank goodness I could never imagine myself giving them up + I found the ‘Grain Brain’ and ‘Wheat Belly’ books rubbish anyway – how early the reasons for heart problems were found (early 20th c.!!), milk triggering Type 1 diabetes and reducing vitamin D activation in the body, and that in China watermelon is a herb!).
Reasons why 3.5 not 4
- the WFPB diet is essentially dairy-and-egg-free *pescatarian* diet that doesn’t mind the accidental (unknowing) or rare use of animal protein, as long as it’s ‘healthy-oil fish’. Yes, vegan and vegetarian diets can be unhealthy (I can admit that in the latter there’s the egg and dairy, so mostly right in that), but so? It’s still ‘can be’. I feel that here is some unconscious leftovers of the old pre-WFPB diet beliefs still swimming in the subconsciousness…
- and the diet guide is too short and leaving-details-to-you-ish (no I’m not getting the Solution book, have no need cos I have others already)
= and this is why I consider Dr Greger’s “How Not To Die” better – it gives no inch to any loose rules (but really this is just my opinion)
- the fourth part of the book is thankfully after the diet introduction part because uhhh… it’s very.long. and quite US-centric, and I don’t feel so much needing to know the details of the hiding and opposition of nutrition things, now that I’m convinced already. I did read this part too, but over a much longer period of time than the pages before it.
So, is this book worth it? Yes, but more as a companion confirming things than just on its own, at least in these days. Worth reading for the China Study part, and most of the book is not a hard work to read (at least until part four, in my case). The revised-and-expanded version is worth buying over the not-so, I would say. Meaning that this is not necessarily necessary, but after some others, including that one I mention about, it is still worth reading for confirmation on things even with the existing flaws.