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Vegan: The New Ethics of Eating [Hardcover]

Erik Marcus (Author)
4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (63 customer reviews)


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Book Description

September 1997
A fresh look at issues addressed a decade ago by Frances Moore Lappe (Diet for a Small Planet), Vegan: The New Ethics of Eating shines a strong light on the unhealthful, inhumane, and destructive aspects of the typical American diet. Vegan is packed with documented research, nutritional information, and telling photos. Features leading heart specialist Dean Ornish, M.D. Forward by Howard Lyman, Humane Society of the U.S.


Editorial Reviews

Review

Hard-hitting and factually based, this book outlines the health, ethical, and ecological reasons for adopting a vegan lifestyle. The author outlines many practical reasons for making this conscious choice- among them is that 70% of all Americans are dying from illnesses related to diet. As heart disease is one of the leading killers, the author suggests a link between animal protein consumption and heart disease. He also gives extensive documentation of cruelty to the animal population by visiting several slaughterhouses and animal farms. The author's writing style appeals to the reader's compassion. It seems at times to be almost political in its agenda. Change your eating habits and become a better person is the final message I am left holding onto at the end of the book. Whether you consider the author's suggestions to be radical or rational, he speaks from personal experience. As noted in the foreword of the book by Howard Lyman, he felt an awakening to the concept of eating vegan when he was lying in a hospital bed. He felt that he could no longer ignore the killing on his family's farm and had to make a lifestyle change. He has the support of many in the medical fields, including Dr. Dean Ornish, care-giver to many celebrities and high-profile public figures and leading author of NY Times Bestselling books, Eat More, Weigh Less and Dr. Dean Ornish's Program for Reversing Heart Disease. Ornish suggests that healing qualities exist with a combination of vegetarianism and meditation, and was the first in his field to present findings suggesting that heart disease can be reversed through diet and lifestyle changes, free of surgery and drugs. Four new food groups are introduced, excluding the meat group. He suggests that protein, calcium, as well as other nutritionally essential elements in a person's diet can be met without the addition of animal food products. While this book is educational, it lacks recipes to show how tantalizing food can be without the addition of meat. However, the lengthy resource list at the end of the book suggests much research and achieves the objective of retraining the reader to think before eating. -- From Independent Publisher

About the Author

Erik Marcus is a writer and public speaker who is dedicated to the advocacy of vegan and vegetarian diets. He is a graduate of Columbia University, where he earned his master's degree in teaching writing. He lives in Cupertion, California.
--This text refers to the Paperback edition.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 211 pages
  • Publisher: Mcbooks Pr (September 1997)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 093552634X
  • ISBN-13: 978-0935526349
  • Product Dimensions: 9.1 x 6 x 0.7 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 12.8 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (63 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #3,095,912 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

In the mid-1990s, I wasn't happy with the accuracy of a lot of the pro-vegetarian literature, so I set about writing _Vegan: The New Ethics of Eating_, which was published in 1998. That same year, I began publishing the Vegan.com website, which today includes my daily blog plus a number of other resources.

In 2005, I came out with another vegan-oriented title, _Meat Market: Animals, Ethics, & Money_. This book involved a tremendous amount of research and has a more activist-oriented focus than my first book. Also, I decided I wanted to personally oversee every aspect of this book, so I self-published it and personally handled the book's typography, indexing, and printing/binding decisions.

In 2009, I self-published my third book on the topic, _The Ultimate Vegan Guide: Compassionate Living Without Sacrifice._ This book takes a breezier and more conversational approach to writing than I did in my first two books. My intention with this last book was to share what I've learned during 20+ years of vegan living, so that anyone can enjoy a quick, easy, and healthful transition. I released a second, updated edition of this book in 2011.

Also in 2011, I released: _A Vegan History: 1944-2010_ a short eBook that covers the major events occurring in the vegan movement since the word's coinage in 1944. It's my hope that readers of this book will gain perspective on how the movement's progress has constantly accelerated, as well as an understanding of the various projects and strategies that have proven most effective.

The focus of my work is to inspire people to become, not just vegan, but effective animal advocates. I believe it's within reach of all of us to keep hundreds of thousands, or even millions, of animals out of factory farms slaughterhouses.

I devote most of my time to updating Vegan.com. When I'm not busy with that I enjoy cooking, reading, NetFlix, and a variety of outdoor activities.

 

Customer Reviews

63 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.6 out of 5 stars (63 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

108 of 112 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Heal Body and Planet, October 6, 2002
By 
J.W.K (Nagano, Japan) - See all my reviews
Erik Marcus has done a masterful job of introducing non-vegans to the vegan perspective. Along with John Robbins' The Food Revolution (which I also highly recommend), there is no better book on the subject. After reading both books, I have decided to become a vegan. It's healthy, ecological, and much kinder toward animals. That said, you need only care about one of the above to make the single most important change in your life. Allow me to begin with some facts: 1) A vegan diet can reduce the risk of heart disease to nearly zero. 2) Vegans have half the chance of getting cancer as meat and dairy eaters. 3) Vegans do not die from Mad Cows disease. 4) The meat industry teats animals so horribly I had to skip over that section in the book. Note that vegan diets do not harm animals at all. 5) 40,000 children die each day, mostly from starvation or hunger-related disease. 6) The entire world could be fed on a vegan diet; instead, we run our grain through cattle and sell it off to the rich. 7) Vegan diets consume much less of the earth's resources: less water, grain, and energy. 8) American rangeland is an ecological moonscape. Although by not means a rigorously proven scientific fact, it should also be noted that many vegans report increased energy levels, better brain functioning, higher self-esteem, and increased resistance to disease and colds after making the dietary switch. The author asks, "Is it reasonable to assume that the human brain...functions identically no matter how it is nourished? Is it logical that a diet of beef and chicken and ice cream will produce the same thoughts and emotions as a diet of fruits, vegetables, and whole grains?" As scientists learn more and more about the nutritional and healing powers of fruits and vegetables, we are gaining a better understanding of the relationship between diet and physical and mental health. In any event, there is a long list of great vegetarians that point toward this relationship: including Leonardo Da Vinci, George Bernard Shaw, Isaac Bashevis Singer, Mahatma Gandhi, Leo Tolstoy, and so on. Some of the most intelligent and kind-hearted people in the world were vegetarians before the -ism was even born. They intuitively grasped the relationship between a plant-based diet and health, and recognized the need to act compassionatley toward animals. A very disarming book, the author's writing style is easy-going and matter-of-fact, affecting a clear, earnest, scientific tone. The preface was even written by former rancher/300lb. football player turned vegan, Howard Lyman, who's story will move you. After meeting him, you be introduced to doctors, nutritional biochemist, epidemiologists, and ecologists who have discovered many objective reasons to make a leap of dietary faith. I cannot over-recommend this book. While you are at it, pick up a copy of The Food Revolution. Read them both, and then pass them on. Just as the cover promises, reading and internalizing this book is the surest way to heal our planet and your body.

Two birds, one stone. Give it a shot.

j.w.k.
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52 of 53 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars I'm sending this book to all my meat-eating friends/family, May 6, 1999
By A Customer
I've been a vegetarian for about three years now and am just beginning to switch to a completely vegan diet. Not only has this book reaffirmed my decision but it has convinced me that I need to make a much stronger effort to educate my meat-eating friends and family about why they too should consider eliminating animal products from their diet. I'm going to begin by sending a copy of this book to all of them. Marcus delivers the message about the drawbacks and dangers of eating meat in a non-inflammatory but nonetheless imperative manner that even the most die-hard meat-eaters will find hard to ignore. In particular, I think Marcus was wise to spend the first several chapters of the book focusing on the medical problems associated with eating meat and the powerful healing effect of switching to a vegan diet. Although I believe concern for the environment and animal welfare are equally good reasons to go vegan, I appreciate the fact that diving right into those arguments can turn some people off. When Marcus does bring up those issues, he does so tactfully but without losing any of the poignancy needed to make people understand why the institutional slaughter of animals is so horrific.

This is a very important book because it has the power to help those of us who are already vegetarians explain to the people we love why they should become vegetarians too.

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34 of 35 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Hooray for Responsible Eaters!, February 15, 2001
By A Customer
This is a fantastic book that gives a persuasive case for vegetarianism. The only books out there that are better are Kerry Walters's Ethical Vegetarianism from Pythagoras to Peter Singer and Mary Moore Lappe's Diet for a Small Planet. You can quit eating meat for health reasons, but the bottom line is that carnivorism inflicts suffering and death on innocent creatures. Read Marcus, Walters, Lappe, and others, and go veggie!
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Inside This Book (learn more)
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Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
layer hens, vegan foods
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
The New Ethics of Eating, Farm Sanctuary, United States, Lynn Jacobs, Cutting Your Cancer Risk, San Francisco, American Rangeland, Weigh Less, China Project, World Hunger, Eat Well, Joel Cohen, The Killing Business, Lorri Bauston, Gene Bauston, Grandma Rexie, New Mexico, Bernard Rollin, Southwood Committee, Waste of the West, Werner Hebenstreit, Dairy Council, John Collinge, New York, Howard Lyman
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