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While the promise of a "reset" may set off some red flags for skeptics, readers searching for a hopeful look at life with Type 2 diabetes or a step-by-step guide to making lifestyle changes will be attracted to this book.
This repackage and expansion of the concepts in Waxman's 2007 The Great Life Diet will be repetitious to those who are already familiar with the author's titles, but those who are new to the macrobiotic diet will appreciate this new volume.
Perhaps not all readers will be fully persuaded to the impact of analogies but most, especially those with an interest in language and psychology, will come away entertained and informed.
Readers looking for basic encouragement to make lifestyle changes may find this book to be a helpful pep talk if they are open to the sort of spirituality expressed by the author. Others may want to pass in favor of more mainstream advice.
Full of fascinating ideas and information about the family structure and its history, this work is sure to be of strong interest to parents, in particular, as they look for meaning beyond the day to day. [See Prepub Alert, 8/12/13.]
At fewer than 120 pages and with a lot of white space on every page, this title will appeal to nonreaders or those looking for something reassuring, but it isn't meant to be a replacement for the usual pregnancy and childbirth books.