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Atkins for Life: The Complete Controlled Carb Program for Permanent Weight Loss and Good Health by Robert C. Atkins
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Atkins for Life: The Complete Controlled Carb Program for Permanent Weight…

by Robert C. Atkins

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244123,712 (2.97)1
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St. Martin's Press (2003), Hardcover, 384 pages

Member:aleshel
Collections:Your libraryRating:
Tags:Nutrition, Diet, Carbohydrates, Weight Loss, Non-fiction, Reference
Recently added byaquaticus, private library, Violaine, Diana61, ckclarke, dhumbert, jillbonina, shooting_star28272
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Very good book but not as good as the original done in 1972. This one is aiming more on the marketing side of his line of low-carb products used in his recipe. Of course, this book was done at the end of his career when more people got involved in his money machine... ( )
  labelleaurore | Mar 5, 2008 |
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Robert Atkins (nutritionist)

Book description

Amazon.com (ISBN 0312315228, Hardcover)

It is bread and not butter that is the enemy in Dr. Atkins's popular and controversial low-carbohydrate/high-fat diet. In In Atkins for Life, he continues his decades-long crusade against low-fat eating. Atkins argues that low-fat meals are high-carbohydrate missiles, causing the body to produce excess insulin, which then produces fat, slows down metabolism, and tips the scale. Instead, he urges readers to stop counting calories and fat grams and start counting carbs to rev up their metabolism and burn fat as an energy source. The question of whether "ketosis," the fat meltdown he advocates, is healthy or harmful is a central question of this sequel to the bestselling Dr. Atkins’ New Diet Revolution. Packed with recipes, menus, carbohydrate counters, and strategies for staying with the plan, this book is less clear than its predecessor. It veers back and forth between how to begin and how to maintain "a controlled carbohydrate lifestyle." It is also more promotional, with photos of satisfied slim folks and pitches for the branded Atkins products. Still, with its pages of testimonials and studies about weight loss, lowered cholesterol, and increased energy, it is hard to argue with Atkins’s results. He puts his proof in the pudding. --Barbara Mackoff

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:02 -0400)

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