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  #256   ^
Old Sat, Dec-12-20, 21:43
s93uv3h's Avatar
s93uv3h s93uv3h is offline
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Plan: Atkins & IF / TRE
Stats: 000/000/000 Male 5' 10"
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Our library somehow got Westman and Berger's early - picked it up and started it today. Definitely bite sized - 292 pages right before the acknowledgements and index starts. Large format and heavy though. So far I'm thinking this is tailored to give to folks so they can make their own hard rudder changes.

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  #257   ^
Old Sun, Dec-13-20, 05:58
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sheryl2020 sheryl2020 is offline
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Posts: 109
 
Plan: Low carb
Stats: 207/172/140 Female 5'3”
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Location: New Mexico
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S9, my copy of End Your Carb Confusion arrives from amazon on Tuesday. Dr. Westman said he wrote this book in a simplified, non technical manner for the masses. Can’t wait until it arrives! I also ordered the new Atkins 100.
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  #258   ^
Old Sun, Dec-20-20, 05:36
Demi's Avatar
Demi Demi is offline
Posts: 26,755
 
Plan: Muscle Centric
Stats: 238/153/160 Female 5'10"
BF:
Progress: 109%
Location: UK
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Quote:
The Best Keto Books to Gift in 2020

There are a lot of books about ketogenic diet and lifestyles—if you’re new to the concept, the selection might be overwhelming. Keto recipe books, especially, seem like they’re a dime a dozen these days. But the true fundamentals of the ketogenic diet—the science, the history, even the politics—are best trusted to the real experts.

What is keto? Where does it come from? Why does it work? These books have the answers.

We’ve read ‘em all. Here’s our guide:

The Case for Keto by Gary Taubes
Gary Taubes is a journalist, not a doctor or a dietitian, but nevertheless he is perhaps the most important single figure in the recent history of low-carbohydrate dieting. Taubes has spent a career investigating the history and politics of nutrition science, as well as the advanced science of human metabolism. In The Case for Keto, his latest, he consolidates his learning into a single concise and comprehensive argument. Why does keto work? And how did the authorities get it so wrong for so long? Start here. There’s no better foundation.

The Art and Science of Low Carbohydrate Living by Jeff Volek and Dr. Stephen Phinney
TPerhaps the one book that did the most to ignite the keto trend in the last decade, this book remains a bible for low-carb diet & lifestyle, presenting an authoritative guide to how and why we should restrict carbohydrates. Also popular: The Art and Science of Low Carbohydrate Performance, the definitive guide to exercise in the ketogenic state.

The Diabetes Code by Dr. Jason Fung
Dr. Fung is known for one dieting technique above all: intermittent fasting. The Diabetes Code provides an excellent overview on the reality insulin resistance, and explains why low-carbohydrate diets work. But it will ultimately be of most interest to dieters that want to try the fasting technique, which may be uniquely beneficial to people with diabetes

Why We Get Sick by Benjamin Bikman
Bikman, a professor of physiology and developmental biology, looks deep at insulin resistance, a condition that has reached epidemic proportions across virtually the entire globe. Insulin resistance causes Type 2 diabetes, of course, but is also at the heart of a bewildering number of chronic diseases and conditions, from cancer, heart disease and Alzheimer’s disease to sexual dysfunction. The book is both a definitive explanation of the pathogenesis and mechanisms of insulin resistance and a practical manual for improving one’s own health (hint: cut the carbs!).

How to Eat in the Time of Covid-19 by Dr. Mariela Glandt
At her pioneering clinic, endocrinologist Dr. Mariela Glandt has helped hundreds of patients lose weight, correct diabetes, and reclaim their lives using the principles of a ketogenic diet. In How to Eat In the Time of Covid-19, she explains how you can use the keto diet principles to fix your metabolic health.

Dr. Glandt offers easy-to-follow eating rules and recommendations that will put you on the path to metabolic health in no time at all! This short, simple guide will help you optimize your nutrition and maximize your defenses against Covid-19!

The P:E Diet by Dr. Ted Naiman
Six-packed Twitter star Dr. Ted Naiman has his own spin on keto—he recommends a diet very high in lean protein and an accompanying regimen of intense muscle-building exercise. This is an extremely practical manual, with hundreds of photos and illustrations. Anyone could benefit from the approach, but it might be most popular with dieters that are really trying to lose weight and add muscle at the same time.

Dr. Bernstein’s Diabetes Solution by Dr. Richard Bernstein
Pretty much the bible of diabetes care, this doorstopper is required reading for anyone ready to take their diabetes management—Type 1 or Type 2—to the next level. No book has influenced the ASweetLife philosophy more. Dr. Bernstein started on his own keto diet when such a thing was practically unheard of. Fifty years later, and he’s still going strong.

End Your Carb Confusion by Dr. Eric Westman and Amy Berger
Dr. Westman has done pioneering clinical work and has recommended low-carb diets to his patients for years. Here he’s joined by the popular nutritionist Amy Berger to share his method. The authors eschew the one size fits all approach and instead offer multiple diet plans featuring different levels of carbohydrate intake, and help explain which might be right for you.

The Big Fat Surprise by Nina Teicholz
Teicholz, an investigative journalist, shows that just about everything you thought you knew about dietary fat, especially saturated fat, is wrong. This book was a thunderclap in the mainstream media, led to the reappraisal of butter and bacon, and helped pave the way for the keto diet’s widespread popularity.

Dr. Atkins’ New Diet Revolution by Dr. Robert Atkins
The book that set off the ketogenic trend in the modern era. The Atkins diet has come in and out of fashion several times, and has since been superseded in its description of metabolic processes, but there’s a reason it’s remained a touchstone for nearly fifty years: it works.

Letter on Corpulence by William Banting
Published in 1863, this booklet wasn’t just the first low-carb diet manual—it may well have been the world’s first diet book, period. William Banting was no doctor—he was undertaker, of all things—but he found wild fame when he shared his own success combatting obesity with a zero-starch, zero sugar diet. A fascinating time machine and a great gift for the intellectually curious keto dieter

The Everyday Keto Kitchen – Carolyn Ketchum
If you’re trying out a new diet, you’re gonna need recipes, and with about a billion keto cookbooks out there, where do you start? We heartily recommend Carolyn Ketchum, a long-time ASweetLife contributor, who is universally beloved in the low-carb community. Everyday Keto Kitchen is just the start—Carolyn has books on baking, soups, breakfast, and more.


Ross Wollen is a chef and writer based in Maine's Midcoast region. Before moving East, Ross was a veteran of the Bay Area restaurant and artisanal food scenes; he has also worked as a food safety consultant. As executive chef of Belcampo Meat Co., Ross helped launch the bone broth craze. Since his diagnosis with Type 1 diabetes in 2017, he has focused on exploring the potential of naturally low-carb cooking.



https://asweetlife.org/the-best-ket...o-gift-in-2020/
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  #259   ^
Old Sun, Dec-20-20, 06:35
Benay's Avatar
Benay Benay is offline
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Plan: Protein Power/Atkins
Stats: 250/167/175 Female 5 feet 6 inches
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Location: Prescott, Arizona, USA
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Good list, Demi
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  #260   ^
Old Tue, Dec-22-20, 09:25
Demi's Avatar
Demi Demi is offline
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Plan: Muscle Centric
Stats: 238/153/160 Female 5'10"
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Progress: 109%
Location: UK
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Quote:
A nutrition journalist dieted his whole life and still gained weight. Then he tried the keto diet, and 'it was like a switch being flipped.'
  • Journalist and low-carb advocate Gary Taubes argues in new book "A Case for Keto" that mainstream nutrition advice leaves some people overweight and unhealthy by recommending too many carbohydrates.
  • Instead, Taubes' makes a case that low-carb diets can benefit people who react poorly to insulin by cutting back on foods that can cause a spike in blood sugar.
  • Keto may not be for everyone. But most people could still benefit from being more carb-aware and cutting out low-quality sources like processed foods and sugars.
If you've ever struggled to lose weight with mainstream nutrition advice, or felt that typical diet guidance (half carbs, mostly plants, not too much) wasn't for you, Gary Taubes can relate.

The longtime dietary advocate and journalist argues that low-carb, high-fat diets are more than just a trend in his latest book "The Case For Keto," out December 29. Instead, keto diets address a serious gap in our understanding of how to eat for health, he says.

According to Taubes, that's in part because conventional nutrition advice is often given by people who haven't experienced chronic health issues related to diet.

"The problem is we've been taking diet advice from lean and healthy people. My argument is if we do what they do, we get hungry and fatter, so we can't do it," he told Insider.

He say he tries for years to lose weight, without success, before finding a low-carb diet to be a revelation for his health. Now he's hoping to share his experience to help people like him.

While the keto diet is considered relatively new in the nutrition world, growing research and books like Taubes' suggest the diet has entered the mainstream of our nutritional consciousness, and it's not likely to disappear anytime soon. "Keto" was recently ranked the most popular diet in the world based on search engine data.

A former football player, amateur boxer and self-described "large guy," Taubes said conventional diets felt like a constant battle with his appetite. With a family history of obesity, he noticed his weight starting to increase in his 30s, despite eating a low-fat diet and working out an hour a day.

His initial foray into low-carb diets was prompted by the popularity of the Atkins diet in the early 2000s. Similar to keto, the diet cuts out breads, pasta, and other carbohydrates in favor of unlimited amounts of meat, cheese, eggs, butter, and other high-fat foods.

Taubes started loading up on eggs and bacon for breakfast, meat and cheese for lunch, and a big steak with a small green salad for dinner.

Within a few months, Taubes said he lost a significant amount of weight. The experience prompted Taubes' revolutionary 2002 article "What If It's All Been A Big Fat Lie?" in the New York Times, praising low-carb, high-fat diets years before "keto" appeared in mainstream news headlines.

The backlash was intense, with rebuttals accusing Taubes' of peddling sensationalized misinformation.

Today, it's becoming more accepted that fat doesn't make you fat, and that it may not be linked to as many health issues as we previously believed. But keto and low-carb diets are still controversial, in part because a lack of rigorous long-term studies lead to questions about keto's health consequences over time. That prompted Taubes to continue to advocate for low-carb diets in his work.

"If it didn't work for me, I wouldn't write a book about it," he said.

Taubes' experience is similar to what many people describe feeling during their first low-carb diet when, after years of struggling to lose weight on other diets, they finally have success.

"I had been dieting all my life. I was gaining weight, so I tried [keto] as an experiment," Taubes said. "I felt great. It was like a switch being flipped."

Taubes argues that compelling research suggests many people gain weight not because of excess calories, but because of insulin, a hormone that helps regulate blood sugar. When you consume carbohydrates, it causes a spike in blood sugar, and your body releases insulin in response.

Sometimes, the body becomes desensitized to insulin (this can be caused by consuming too many refined carbs and sugar) and requires more of it to continue maintaining blood sugar levels. Keto advocates theorize that this can trigger fat storage for people who respond poorly to insulin, either because of lifestyle factors or genetics, triggering them to gain weight.

This theory, sometimes called the carbohydrate-insulin hypothesis, has been contested. While insulin plays a role in fat storage, there's a lack of research showing it matters more than calorie intake. Most dietitians continue to advise that calories are the main factor in weight gain or loss, and research supports this.

There's also no clear evidence that keto can work where other diets have failed.

"The Case For Keto" takes a broad look at many of the common arguments against keto, with a deep dive into the historical context of low-carb diets, and the scientific precedence for recommending them.

Taubes also has a beef with the common claim that keto diets are difficult to sustain. Many dietitians and other nutrition experts have argued that cutting carbs is too restrictive for most people to maintain consistently. And when strict diets fail, they can lead to even more weight gain as dieters treat themselves to previously forbidden foods, then try to restrict them again, a phenomenon called "yo-yo dieting."

But Taubes compares foregoing the carbs to avoiding a food because you're allergic. If you know lactose makes you sick, it's easier to avoid despite the occasional temptation of ice cream, he says.

For him and other long-term keto-ers, the benefits of low-carb diets overshadow the loss of beloved foods like pizza, pasta, and pastries.

"I find it very easy to sustain it," Taubes said. "A lot of people do, especially men. If you tell them to live on steak, eggs, and bacon, they're pretty happy about it, at least for a while."

Taubes doesn't think everyone needs to be on a keto diet. His wife is a vegetarian who regularly eats carbs.

"On some level, I converted her to the idea that carbs are fattening,but she hasn't given them up entirely," he said. "She's never tried to convince me to eat like her."

For Taubes, the health benefits also outweigh the ethical and environmental concerns about eating a diet high in animal products. He said he believes that "what may be best for human health is not best for the planet."

"In an ideal world, I wouldn't eat animals. Physiologically, I'm not willing to give it up," he said.

Some people might be able to manage their weight and health, just fine while eating carbs, but Taubes isn't writing for them.

"Those of us who gain weight easily have to minimize insulin levels. And if you eat to minimize insulin, you eat something very close to a ketogenic diet," he said.


https://www.insider.com/gary-taubes...ht-loss-2020-12
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  #261   ^
Old Thu, Dec-24-20, 02:47
s93uv3h's Avatar
s93uv3h s93uv3h is offline
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Posts: 1,662
 
Plan: Atkins & IF / TRE
Stats: 000/000/000 Male 5' 10"
BF:
Progress: 97%
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Browsing through new 2020 book The Atkins 100 Eating SolutionThe Atkins Eating Solution . Intro by Rob Lowe, whose been on Atkins for more than 20 years! Of course it's a step process, starting with Atkins 20 step 1, and goes from there.

_
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  #262   ^
Old Thu, Dec-24-20, 04:37
JEY100's Avatar
JEY100 JEY100 is offline
Posts: 13,440
 
Plan: P:E/DDF
Stats: 225/150/169 Female 5' 9"
BF:45%/28%/25%
Progress: 134%
Location: NC
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I have both The Atkins 100 Eating Solution and Dr Westman's End Your Carb Confusion and both books offer the phased approach to carb reduction if "strict keto", which is so often mis-defined as adding loads of fats, doesn’t work for you. Dr Westman makes a strong argument for starting with his prescription strength 20g total version to know the benefits of ketosis even if healthy. These are easy plans to follow, phase 3 up to 150g carbs, with unlimited vegetables.
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  #263   ^
Old Fri, Jan-01-21, 00:53
s93uv3h's Avatar
s93uv3h s93uv3h is offline
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Plan: Atkins & IF / TRE
Stats: 000/000/000 Male 5' 10"
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Started Gary Taubes' The Case for Keto . From the introduction I'm already hooked.

_
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  #264   ^
Old Fri, Jan-01-21, 05:13
JEY100's Avatar
JEY100 JEY100 is offline
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Plan: P:E/DDF
Stats: 225/150/169 Female 5' 9"
BF:45%/28%/25%
Progress: 134%
Location: NC
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Quote:
Originally Posted by s93uv3h
Started Gary Taubes' The Case for Keto . From the introduction I'm already hooked.

_


There's a thread in Research with interviews, and a critical review as well.
https://forum.lowcarber.org/showthread.php?t=484711

Dr Westman's tweet about Gary Taubes new book: "GT does it again! Just out: The Case For Keto. These two [also Case against Sugar] expositions together are as compelling as Good Calories, Bad Calories! Proud that my team and Duke Peds played a role!"

Our big county library system is slow to come back on line...processing new books appears still to be down the priority list! You even get yours early.
Our facilities and staff are also being used for contact tracing, so I can’t complain, waiting patiently for the Case for Keto.
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  #265   ^
Old Fri, Jan-01-21, 22:58
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LCer4Life LCer4Life is offline
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Plan: Atkins
Stats: 155/143/125 Female 63
BF:33.2/28.7%/24%
Progress: 40%
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Our library just filled my request. Need to pick it up. Looking forward to reading.
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  #266   ^
Old Sat, May-01-21, 05:56
JEY100's Avatar
JEY100 JEY100 is offline
Posts: 13,440
 
Plan: P:E/DDF
Stats: 225/150/169 Female 5' 9"
BF:45%/28%/25%
Progress: 134%
Location: NC
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A new book on May 25th. I have only been waiting for it for five years. Sam Apple indicted that he was going to expand this cancer article, but he works at a Gary Taubes pace (that's a good thing!)

Quote:
An Old Idea, Revived: Starve Cancer to Death
In the early 20th century, the German biochemist Otto Warburg believed that tumors could be treated by disrupting their source of energy. His idea was dismissed for decades — until now.


https://www.nytimes.com/2016/05/15/...r-to-death.html


Ravenous: Otto Warburg, the Nazis, and the Search for the Cancer-Diet Connection

https://www.amazon.com/Ravenous-War...n/dp/1631493159

Quote:
The extraordinary story of the Nazi-era scientific genius who discovered how cancer cells eat—and what it means for how we should.


The Nobel laureate Otto Warburg—a cousin of the famous finance Warburgs—was widely regarded in his day as one of the most important biochemists of the twentieth century, a man whose research was integral to humanity’s understanding of cancer. He was also among the most despised figures in Nazi Germany. As a Jewish homosexual living openly with his male partner, Warburg represented all that the Third Reich abhorred. Yet Hitler and his top advisors dreaded cancer, and protected Warburg in the hope that he could cure it.


In Ravenous, Sam Apple reclaims Otto Warburg as a forgotten, morally compromised genius who pursued cancer single-mindedly even as Europe disintegrated around him. While the vast majority of Jewish scientists fled Germany in the anxious years leading up to World War II, Warburg remained in Berlin, working under the watchful eye of the dictatorship. With the Nazis goose-stepping their way across Europe, systematically rounding up and murdering millions of Jews, Warburg awoke each morning in an elegant, antiques-filled home and rode horses with his partner, Jacob Heiss, before delving into his research at the Kaiser Wilhelm Society.


Hitler and other Nazi leaders, Apple shows, were deeply troubled by skyrocketing cancer rates across the Western world, viewing cancer as an existential threat akin to Judaism or homosexuality. Ironically, they viewed Warburg as Germany’s best chance of survival. Setting Warburg’s work against an absorbing history of cancer science, Apple follows him as he arrives at his central belief that cancer is a problem of metabolism. Though Warburg’s metabolic approach to cancer was considered groundbreaking, his work was soon eclipsed in the early postwar era, after the discovery of the structure of DNA set off a search for the genetic origins of cancer.


Remarkably, Warburg’s theory has undergone a resurgence in our own time, as scientists have begun to investigate the dangers of sugar and the link between obesity and cancer, finding that the way we eat can influence how cancer cells take up nutrients and grow. Rooting his revelations in extensive archival research as well as dozens of interviews with today’s leading cancer authorities, Apple demonstrates how Warburg’s midcentury work may well hold the secret to why cancer became so common in the modern world and how we can reverse the trend. A tale of scientific discovery, personal peril, and the race to end a disastrous disease, Ravenous would be the stuff of the most inventive fiction were it not, in fact, true.
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  #267   ^
Old Sat, May-01-21, 06:21
WereBear's Avatar
WereBear WereBear is offline
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Plan: EpiPaleo/Primal/LowOx
Stats: 220/130/150 Female 67
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Location: USA
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That rotten careerist, Keys, has this to answer for, as well.
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  #268   ^
Old Sat, May-01-21, 23:20
s93uv3h's Avatar
s93uv3h s93uv3h is offline
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Posts: 1,662
 
Plan: Atkins & IF / TRE
Stats: 000/000/000 Male 5' 10"
BF:
Progress: 97%
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Quote:
Originally Posted by JEY100
A new book on May 25th. I have only been waiting for it for five years. Sam Apple indicted that he was going to expand this cancer article, but he works at a Gary Taubes pace (that's a good thing!)

https://www.amazon.com/Ravenous-War...n/dp/1631493159
Thanks for the tip - first in line for the hardcover. There's a book giveaway on goodreads that ends in 9 days or so.

.

Last edited by s93uv3h : Sat, May-01-21 at 23:25.
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  #269   ^
Old Tue, May-04-21, 09:03
BawdyWench's Avatar
BawdyWench BawdyWench is offline
Posts: 8,793
 
Plan: Carnivore
Stats: 212/179/160 Female 5'6"
BF:
Progress: 63%
Location: Rural Maine
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If you're interested in Warburg, read "Tripping Over the Truth: How the Metabolic Theory of Cancer Is Overturning One of Medicine's Most Entrenched Paradigms." Dr. Eades recommended it years ago, and I finally read it this year. Amazing stuff!
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  #270   ^
Old Thu, Jun-03-21, 20:05
s93uv3h's Avatar
s93uv3h s93uv3h is offline
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Posts: 1,662
 
Plan: Atkins & IF / TRE
Stats: 000/000/000 Male 5' 10"
BF:
Progress: 97%
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Picked up Ravenous: Otto Warburg, the Nazis, and the Search for the Cancer-Diet Connection from the library and have it lined up to read. I did read the introduction and scanned the chapters:

Part IV titled: Pure, White, and Deadly (The Twenty-First Century)

18. The Metabolism Revival
19 Diabetes and Cancer
20 The Insulin Hypothesis
21 Sugar

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