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YES. Just YES.
I've been really grateful for the experience to work in eating disorder (of all sorts) treatment, and it's raised my awareness about the absolute necessity of fat activism a significant amount. Here's the thing: feeling bad about your body, for whatever reason, has never helped anyone be healthier. Research is great–I am, after all, a social scientist–but it is less great when politics and hysteria play integral roles in how research is conducted, interpreted, and disseminated to the general public. Campos is a lawyer, not an obesity researcher himself, which I think really allows him to bring a critical eye and an appropriate sense of moral outrage to this issue. Even if obesity isn't of personal or professional relevance to you, this is a fascinating read. Tore through it on two plane rides, and would recommend it to anyone.
Meh, decent but perhaps not the most objective one could hope for. I appreciate the many points he makes about the diet industry, but he does get repetitive. And he is a bit aggressive in his comparisons and examples at times. He also doesn't realize that vegans and vegetarians can have at least as much fun as meat-eaters, but that's standard thinking.
On the whole though, generally a worthwhile book for an introduction to the actual research on weight being done in the last 20-30 or so years. Yes, there are dry parts, but mostly his writing is decent. I also appreciate anyone who sticks in a reading list at the end. Because I need more books to read.