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Why We Get Fat: And What to Do About It Kindle Edition
NATIONAL BESTSELLER • “Taubes stands the received wisdom about diet and exercise on its head.” —The New York Times
What’s making us fat? And how can we change? Building upon his critical work in Good Calories, Bad Calories and presenting fresh evidence for his claim, bestselling author Gary Taubes revisits these urgent questions. Featuring a new afterword with answers to frequently asked questions.
Taubes reveals the bad nutritional science of the last century—none more damaging or misguided than the “calories-in, calories-out” model of why we get fat—and the good science that has been ignored. He also answers the most persistent questions: Why are some people thin and others fat? What roles do exercise and genetics play in our weight? What foods should we eat, and what foods should we avoid? Persuasive, straightforward, and practical, Why We Get Fat is an essential guide to nutrition and weight management.
Complete with an easy-to-follow diet. Featuring a new afterword with answers to frequently asked questions.
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherAnchor
- Publication dateDecember 28, 2010
- File size4423 KB
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Editorial Reviews
From Booklist
Review
“Well-researched and thoughtful . . . Reconsidering how our diet affects our bodies, how we might modify it to be healthier, and being less harsh with those who struggle with their weight are all worthy goals. Taubes has done us a great service by bringing these issues to the table.”
-Dennis Rosen, The Boston Globe
“Less dense and easier to read [than Good Calories, Bad Calories] but no less revelatory.”
-Jeff Baker, The Oregonian
“Taubes’s critique is so pointed and vociferous that reading him will change the way you look at calories, the food pyramid, and your daily diet.”
-Men’s Journal
“Important . . . This excellent book, built on sound research and common sense, contains essential information.”
-Larry Cox, Tucson Citizen
“Aggressive . . . An exhaustive investigation.”
-Casey Schwartz, The Daily Beast
“Passionate and urgent . . . Backed by a persuasive amount of detail . . . As an award-winning scientific journalist who spent the past decade rigorously tracking down and assimilating obesity research, he’s uniquely qualified to understand and present the big picture of scientific opinions and results. Despite legions of researchers and billions of government dollars expended, Taubes is the one to painstakingly compile this information, assimilate it, and make it available to the public . . . Taubes does the important and extraordinary work of pulling it all together for us.”
...
About the Author
Gary Taubes is a contributing correspondent for Science magazine. His writing has appeared in The Atlantic, The New York Times Magazine, Esquire, and The Best of the Best American Science Writing (2010). He has received three Science in Society Journalism Awards from the National Association of Science Writers, the only print journalist so recognized. He is currently a Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Investigator in Health Policy Research at the University of California, Berkeley School of Public Health. He lives in Oakland.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
The Original Sin
In 1934, a young German pediatrician named Hilde Bruch moved to America, settled in New York City, and was “startled,” as she later wrote, by the number of fat children she saw—“ really fat ones, not only in clinics, but on the streets and subways, and in schools.” Indeed, fat children in New York were so conspicuous that other European immigrants would ask Bruch about it, assuming that she would have an answer. What is the matter with American children? they would ask. Why are they so bloated and blown up? Many would say they’d never seen so many children in such a state.
Today we hear such questions all the time, or we ask them ourselves, with the continual reminders that we are in the midst of an epidemic of obesity (as is the entire developed world). Similar questions are asked about fat adults. Why are they so bloated and blown up? Or you might ask yourself: Why am I?
But this was New York City in the mid- 1930s. This was two decades before the first Kentucky Fried Chicken and McDonald’s franchises, when fast food as we know it today was born. This was half a century before supersizing and high- fructose corn
syrup. More to the point, 1934 was the depths of the Great Depression, an era of soup kitchens, bread lines, and unprecedented
unemployment. One in every four workers in the United States was unemployed. Six out of every ten Americans were living in
poverty. In New York City, where Bruch and her fellow immigrants were astonished by the adiposity of the local children, one in four children were said to be malnourished. How could this be?
A year after arriving in New York, Bruch established a clinic at Columbia University’s College of Physicians and Surgeons to treat obese children. In 1939, she published the first of a series of reports on her exhaustive studies of the many obese children she had treated, although almost invariably without success. From interviews with her patients and their families, she learned that these obese children did indeed eat excessive amounts of food—no matter how much either they or their parents might initially deny it. Telling them to eat less, though, just didn’t work, and no amount of instruction or compassion, counseling, or exhortations— of either children or parents—seemed to help. It was hard to avoid, Bruch said, the simple fact that these children had, after all, spent their entire lives trying to eat in moderation and so control their weight, or at least thinking about eating less than they did, and yet they remained obese. Some of these children, Bruch reported, “made strenuous efforts to lose weight, practically giving up on living to achieve it.” But maintaining a lower weight involved “living on a continuous semi-starvation diet,” and they just couldn’t do it, even though obesity made them miserable and social outcasts.
One of Bruch’s patients was a fine- boned girl in her teens, “literally disappearing in mountains of fat.” This young girl had spent her life fighting both her weight and her parents’ attempts to help her slim down. She knew what she had to do, or so she believed, as did her parents—she had to eat less—and the struggle to do this defined her existence. “I always knew that life depended on your figure,” she told Bruch. “I was always unhappy and depressed when gaining [weight]. There was nothing to live for. . . . I actually hated myself. I just could not stand it. I didn’t want to look at myself. I hated mirrors. They showed how fat I was. . . . It never made me feel happy to eat and get fat—but I never could see a solution for it and so I kept on getting fatter.”
Like Bruch’s fine- boned girl, those of us who are overweight or obese will spend much of our lives trying to eat less, or at least eat not too much. Sometimes we succeed, sometimes we fail, but the fight goes on. For some, like Bruch’s patients, the battle begins in childhood. For others, it starts in college with the freshman twenty, that cushion of fat that appears around waist and hips
while spending the first year away from home. Still others begin to realize in their thirties or forties that being lean is no longer the effortless achievement it once was.
Should we be fatter than the medical authorities would prefer, and should we visit a doctor for any reason, that doctor is likely to
suggest more or less forcefully that we do something about it. Obesity and overweight, so we’ll be told, are associated with an increased risk of virtually every chronic disease that ails us—heart disease, stroke, diabetes, cancer, dementia, asthma. We’ll be instructed to exercise regularly, to diet, to eat less, as though the thought of doing so, the desire to do so, would never otherwise have crossed our minds. “More than in any other illness,” as Bruch said about obesity, “the physician is called upon only to do a special trick, to make the patient do something—stop eating— after it has already been proved that he cannot do it.”
The physicians of Bruch’s era weren’t thoughtless, and the doctors of today are not, either. They merely have a flawed belief system—a paradigm—that stipulates that the reason we get fat is clear and incontrovertible, as is the cure. We get fat, our physicians tell us, because we eat too much and/or move too little, and so the cure is to do the opposite. If nothing else, we should eat “not too much,” as Michael Pollan famously prescribes in his best-selling book In Defense of Food, and this will suffice. At least we won’t get fatter still. This is what Bruch described in 1957 as the “prevalent American attitude that the problem [of obesity] is simply one of eating more than the body needs,” and now it’s the prevalent attitude worldwide.
We can call this the “calories- in/ calories- out” or the “overeating” paradigm of excess fat—the “energy balance” paradigm, if
we want to get technical. “The fundamental cause of obesity and overweight,” as the World Health Organization says, “is an energy imbalance between calories consumed on one hand, and calories expended on the other hand.” We get fat when we take in more energy than we expend (a positive energy balance, in the scientific terminology), and we get lean when we expend more than we take in (a negative energy balance). Food is energy, and we measure that energy in the form of calories. So, if we take in more calories than we expend, we get fatter. If we take in fewer calories, we get leaner.
This way of thinking about our weight is so compelling and so pervasive that it is virtually impossible nowadays not to believe it. Even if we have plenty of evidence to the contrary—no matter how much of our lives we’ve spent consciously trying to eat less and exercise more without success—it’s more likely that we’ll question our own judgment and our own willpower than we will this notion that our adiposity is determined by how many calories we consume and expend.
My favorite example of this thinking came from a wellrespected exercise physiologist, a co- author of a set of physical-activity and health guidelines that were published in August 2007 by the American Heart Association and the American College of Sports Medicine. This fellow told me that he personally had been “short, fat, and bald” when he first took up distance running in the 1970s, and now he was in his late sixties and was “short, fatter, and bald.” In the intervening years, he said, he had gained thirty-odd pounds and run maybe eighty thousand miles—the equivalent, more or less, of running three times around the Earth (at the equator). He believed that there was a limit to how much exercise could help him maintain his weight, but he also believed he
would be fatter still if he hadn’t been running.
When I asked him whether he really thought he might be leaner had he run even more, maybe run four times around the planet instead of three, he said, “I don’t see how I could have been more active. I had no time to do more. But if I could have gone out over the last couple of decades for two to three hours a day, maybe I would not have gained this weight.” And the point is that maybe he would have anyway, but he just couldn’t wrap his head around that possibility. As sociologists of science would say,
he was trapped in a paradigm.
Over the years, this calories- in/ calories- out paradigm of excess fat has proved to be remarkably resistant to any evidence to the
contrary. Imagine a murder trial in which one credible witness after another takes the stand and testifies that the suspect was elsewhere at the time of the killing and so had an airtight alibi, and yet the jurors keep insisting that the defendant is guilty, because that’s what they believed when the trial began.
Consider the obesity epidemic. Here we are as a population getting fatter and fatter. Fifty years ago, one in every eight or nine Americans would have been officially considered obese, and today it’s one in every three. Two in three are now considered overweight, which means they’re carrying around more weight than the public- health authorities deem to be healthy. Children are fatter, adolescents are fatter, even newborn babies are emerging from the womb fatter. Throughout the decades of this obesity epidemic, the calories-in/ calories-out, energy-balance notion has held sway, and so the health officials assume that either we’re not paying attention to what they’ve been telling us—eat less and exercise more—or we just can’t help ourselves.
Malcolm Gladwell discussed this paradox in The New Yorker in 1998. “We have been told that we mus...
Product details
- ASIN : B003WUYOQ6
- Publisher : Anchor; Reprint edition (December 28, 2010)
- Publication date : December 28, 2010
- Language : English
- File size : 4423 KB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 273 pages
- Best Sellers Rank: #149,888 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #77 in Food Counters
- #166 in Weight Maintenance Diets
- #174 in Healthy Living
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Gary Taubes is an investigative science and health journalist and co-founder of the non-profit Nutrition Science Initiative (NuSI.org). He is the author of Why We Get Fat and What to Do About It and Good Calories, Bad Calories (The Diet Delusion in the UK). Taubes is the recipient of a Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Investigator Award in Health Policy Research, and has won numerous other awards for his journalism. These include the International Health Reporting Award from the Pan American Health Organization and the National Association of Science Writers Science in Society Journalism Award, which he won in 1996, 1999 and 2001. (He is the first print journalist to win this award three times.) Taubes graduated from Harvard College in 1977 with an S.B. degree in applied physics, and received an M.S. degree in engineering from Stanford University (1978) and in journalism from Columbia University (1981).
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Customers find the book convincing, fascinating, and worth reading. They appreciate the information quality, saying it's informative, well-researched, and important. Readers say the book helps them lose weight without feeling hungry. They also mention that the book makes them feel good and no longer get pain.
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Customers find the book convincing, fascinating, and worth reading. They appreciate that the content is presented more simply and with less dense discussions. Readers also mention the language is well-written and entertaining.
"...It is neat, plausible, and wrong. It has in fact been disproved, as nearly as "disproof" can exist in nutrition science...." Read more
"...Book three was a great read and told me what I needed to know to not only follow a low-carb diet, but to defend my choice to those who would doubt..." Read more
"...the same conclusions as Taubes' previous book, and also explains some concepts in brilliant and remarkable new ways, I am not sure I would have been..." Read more
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Customers find the book very informative and impressive. They appreciate the compelling arguments soundly grounded in research. Readers also mention the science is long and well-established.
"...It is neat, plausible, and wrong. It has in fact been disproved, as nearly as "disproof" can exist in nutrition science...." Read more
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Customers find the book compelling and easy to read. They say it takes a critical look at the data behind obesity and how that information contradicts the current research. Readers also mention the book is unambiguous in what makes them fat and how to lose weight.
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Customers find the book makes them feel good. They say they're stronger and more active at almost 40 than they were before. Readers also mention they no longer get pain, headaches, or bloat after reading it. They say they feel completely liberated and never feel deprived.
"...The good news is that on the fifth day, I felt great. Unlike low-fat diets, I'm rarely hungry now that carbs are mostly out of my system...." Read more
"...It takes 20 minutes a day. And made me feel better. Not sure you need exercise on this diet but it helped me...." Read more
"...I've known low-carb works for me. Every time I've done it, I felt great, except once I did it eating too many lean meats and felt sick...." Read more
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Customers find the book's hunger aspect digestible and believable. They say they are never hungry and have little to no cravings.
"...But after that, no hunger and felt fine. I tried to stay below 20 carbs the first few weeks...." Read more
"...January 31, 2015 I was at 138. 20 lbs in about 5 months.AND NEVER HUNGRY!!!!! That's the part that is hard to understand...." Read more
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Customers say the book provides advice that actually works. They mention it's easy to follow and the results are great. Readers also mention it works without added exercise, calorie counting, or hunger.
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Customers have mixed opinions about the book's ease of use. Some mention it's surprisingly simple and brief, while others say it's difficult to follow at times and tedious.
"...the recommendations on what to do about it are surprisingly simple and therefore brief...." Read more
"...I will admit, it was difficult to get through...." Read more
"...This book, on the other hand, is succinct and simple...." Read more
"...I love it but it was laborious." Read more
Customers find the pacing of the book repetitive, boring, and dry. They also say the first few chapters are slow and the ending chapters feel rushed. Readers mention there is a lot of misinformation and cherry-picking of research.
"...the first part of the book dragged a little for me because it got somewhat repetitive as we kept learning about other tribes and cultures that had..." Read more
"...TO ME, this is a very misleading message that feels more like trying to sell books than educating the public...." Read more
"...but unfortunately many fats are processed, oxidized, unnatural and unhealthy, and many high fat foods are also processed meats which often contain..." Read more
"...I'll admit, this book can be really, really dry at times, the first half, especially...." Read more
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An awesome book that really delves deep into nutrition for the lay person
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Top reviews from the United States
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Everyone in the developed world knows what's causing our obesity epidemic. BBC nailed it: "We eat too much, and too much of the wrong things," and Michelle Obama tells us "We have to move more." Clearly what we need is a balanced diet of lean meats, some good fats, and complex carbohydrates like fruit, vegetables and whole grain bread, and exercise of 30 to 90 minutes per day. Their prescription is completely reasonable and makes intuitive sense.
It is neat, plausible, and wrong. It has in fact been disproved, as nearly as "disproof" can exist in nutrition science.
In his previous book, Good Calories Bad Calories, respected science journalist Gary Taubes exhaustively researched and cited two centuries worth of research in nutrition. He came to the conclusion that none of those recommendations is supported by science, because the fundamental theory on which they're based is wrong. Why We Get Fat is an updated summary of that earlier work, much quicker and easier to read, with some significant points clarified.
The most important point of the book is that all those public recommendations -- the food pyramid, the "eat food, not too much" approach, everything we know about a balanced lifestyle -- is founded on the premise of Calories In vs. Calories Out. That we get fat because we eat too many calories, or we don't burn enough of them through movement. But this is nonsense. It's not just wrong, it is actually not a statement about what causes obesity at all (or heart disease, cancer or diabetes, for that matter.) It is, in Taubes' words, a "junior high level mistake," because it tells us nothing about fat accumulation. If we get fat, by definition we have taken in more calories than we've put out -- but WHY we took in those calories, or didn't burn them, is the key point.
Taubes reviews the scientific literature (rather than the popular press) and presents a conclusion that was common knowledge before WWII, and heresy afterward: we get fat because our fat cells have become disregulated and are taking nutrients that should be available to other tissues. Like a tumor, the cells live for themselves rather than in balance with the rest of the body. And since those nutrients aren't available, we become hungry and tired. Therefore we eat more, and move less.
For the chronic dieters among us, one passage about animal models will explain decades of frustration. Rodents with a particular part of the hypothalamus destroyed would become obese and/or sedentary *as a consequence* of their bodies putting on more fat. "After the surgery, their fat tissue sucks up calories to make more fat; this leaves insufficient fuel for the rest of the body...The only way to prevent these animals from getting obese is to starve them...they get fat not by overeating but by eating at all." Sound familiar?
The problem isn't one of gluttony and sloth, as Taubes refers to it, but of hormone balance. Simply put, some people are more sensitive to the hormone effects of insulin, cortisol, and a few other -ols, than other people are. The more sensitive you are, the more you're likely to get fat, and the more fat you're likely to get, in the presence of even small amounts of carbohydrate -- and in the absence of enough fat.
That's right, this book advocates eating fat. Not just moderately, but as much fat as possible, up to 78% of calories. Not lean meats, not Jenny-O 99.6% fat-free turkey, not skinless chicken breasts, but lard. Yes, lard. The healthy way of eating, according to Taubes, is moderately high protein and high fat. Yes, high fat. About a 3:1 ratio of fat to protein, and almost no carbohydrates. (Telling people to eat a balanced diet containing carbohydrates is, he says, equivalent to telling smokers to include a balanced serving of cigarettes.) And he demonstrates exactly why a high-fat, low-carbohydrate diet is the most heart-healthy approach, as borne out by several dozen recent studies.
While Taubes acknowledges that exercise seems to be good for us for a variety of reasons, weight control isn't one of them. Study after study conducted by proponents of exercise have admitted that they see no compelling evidence for exercise as a weight-loss tool. And it makes sense if you throw out the calories in/calories out model of why we get fat. If we're fat because our fat tissues are starving the rest of our cells of fuel, exercise is just going to make us hungrier and more tired, not leaner and more fit. (It's worth noting that according to Taubes, in the 1930s obese patients were treated with bed rest.)
[This review was edited to clarify the following point.] The main thrust of Taubes' argument, however, surrounds sugar and to a lesser extent any carbohydrate. Insulin is the primary hormone that fixes fat in the fat cells. This is why Type I diabetics lose weight: they're not producing enough insulin. Since insulin is manufactured in direct response to carbohydrates, if you don't eat them, you won't have a mechanism by which to store fat. (Taubes notes that this mechanism is not controversial; it simply hasn't had an impact on nutrition policy.) Taubes argues that any success in standard diets can be attributed directly to the dieter's reduced intake of carbohydrates, especially sugars and particularly fructose.
Once the underlying cause of obesity is understood (hormone balance, not gluttony/sloth) the recommendations on what to do about it are surprisingly simple and therefore brief. This is a book about the science of nutrition, not a diet book, but there is a list of recommended foods in the Appendix. The book does not tell you how to eat in a restaurant. But it does tell you that the issue isn't in your brain, your willpower, your character, your job, your environment or even (except to the extent that you're sensitive to carbohydrate) in your genes. The problem with fat is in your fat cells.
For a lay audience, this book is as good as it gets if you want to read actual science about health and nutrition. If you're of scientific or technical bent, read Good Calories Bad Calories first, then give Why We Get Fat to your parents.
I liked Taubes's writing style and appreciated his research efforts. He breaks the overall book into three books. However, the first part of the book dragged a little for me because it got somewhat repetitive as we kept learning about other tribes and cultures that had been healthy prior to the introduction of carbohydrates into their diets. The second book was a little more interesting. By about pages 115 or so, I was fascinated. Despite my inability to read through books one and two quickly, by the time I got to book three, because he has done so much research proving his point, I definitely got the point and believed him. Book three was a great read and told me what I needed to know to not only follow a low-carb diet, but to defend my choice to those who would doubt my decision.
Actually, I have to admit I was outraged by the time I finished reading his book, because everything public health institutions and our doctors have told us about weight loss has been wrong, but the science and research that shows what will actually facilitate weight loss has been there all along. Many of these studies date back to the 1940s or even earlier, and yet the research has not been shared with the public, or even taught to our medical students. If obesity and diabetes are such huge health issues facing our country, and putting such a financial strain on our economy, why would the scientific community base weight loss advice on ideas not proven to work? It's mind-boggling. It also makes me angry that I've spent so much on fitness books, when exercising alone can't cause you to lose weight.
I've now been on a diet mostly devoid of carbohydrates for close to three weeks. I've lost 7 lbs during that time period. I would estimate I started off about 20-25 lbs. overweight for my body type and height. Weight loss for women is often about 2 lbs. per week, so I'm doing slightly better than that. I've also been taking body measurements, and have lost 1 1/4 inches off my waist, 1 1/4 inches from my hips, and about an inch from my thighs. It depends on where you measure whether it's above or below an inch. These are pretty good results for not quite three weeks into a diet.
The first four days of the diet were incredibly rough, and I wish I'd finished the book prior to removing carbs from my diet, because he has tips to help deal with carbohydrate withdrawal. I was definitely a sugar addict, and was lethargic and grouchy for the first four days, as well as experiencing some major cravings. On the third or fourth day, I was incredibly weak, felt like I had the flu, and slept all day. I should have been supplementing my diet with more sodium, through broth or whatnot, to help reduce the effects. I was also still going to the gym and weightlifting and doing cardio, something that Taubes said can be counterproductive during the first stages of removing carbs.
The good news is that on the fifth day, I felt great. Unlike low-fat diets, I'm rarely hungry now that carbs are mostly out of my system. It was always hard to diet before because I was constantly hungry as I cut calories. I used to get home from work and would be famished; eating fruit or even carrots with hummus, left me hungry again by dinner time. By removing the carbs (even the ones in fruit and vegetables), my body works to use the protein and fat I've eaten, and then burns the energy stored in my fat cells, which is how it should work. I'm more energetic now, but am most likely eating less. I have cheated a few times. I've had 3-5 glasses of wine each week, but it's down from my daily glass. I had a small serving of dessert two times as well over the past three weeks. I'm planning on getting ice cream next week on the 4th of July as well. I need an eating plan to follow that will work for me in the long run, where I can maintain it but not feel deprived all the time. Removing most carbs, but still allowing myself a glass of wine or a treat once in a while, have made these past three weeks the most effortless eating of my life while trying to lose weight.
For those concerned that we must have fruits and vegetables to be healthy, read the book. I can tell you that the majority of your essential amino acids come from meat sources, and that you don't need antioxidants if you're not eating carbs, but reading about the research will actually make this click in your brain. For most of us, what Taubes has to say goes against what we've always been taught. When we first hear we can get all our nutrients from protein and fat, our minds rebel. It creates dissonance for us. But embrace the idea, once you're reassured that the literature and research actually supports it, and you'll soon be dropping weight and feeling better.
Top reviews from other countries
The only thing I didn’t agree with was the author’s references to the THEORY of evolution as if it was absolute fact, ironic given the arguments for it are even weaker and more circular referencing than the outdated low fat recommendations that this book so successfully debunks. Given that creation / intelligent design also completely supports the points that the author is using the evolution references for, it would be nice if that could also be acknowledged.. it would give even greater strength to his argument!
Overall though, I’m really glad I read this book and hope to make life improving changes as a result.





