How the Founder of Weight Watchers Changed the World
From a contributor to The Cut, one of Vogue's most anticipated books "bravely and honestly" (Busy Philipps) talks about weight loss and sheds a light on Weight Watchers founder Jean Nidetch: "a triumphant chronicle" (New York Times). Marisa Meltzer began her first diet at the age of five. Growing up an indoors-loving child in Northern California, she learned from an early age that weight was the one part of her life she could neither change nor even really understand. Fast forward nearly four decades. Marisa, also a contributor to the New Yorker and the New York Times, comes across an obituary for Jean Nidetch, the Queens, New York housewife who founded Weight Watchers in 1963. Weaving Jean's incredible story as weight loss maven and pathbreaking entrepreneur with Marisa's own journey through Weight Watchers, she chronicles the deep parallels, and enduring frustrations, in each woman's decades-long efforts to lose weight and keep it off. The result is funny, unexpected, and unforgettable: a testament to how transformation goes far beyond a number on the scale.
Reviews with the most likes.
I'm sorry that Jean Nidetch died before someone wrote a biography of her. I'm sorry her name isn't even on the title. I'm going to take the line “...capitalism is at the heart of wellness culture...” with me as I send me copy back to the library for the next reader.
Meltzer goes to WW for a year, to lose weight and document the process, her history with fatness and weight-loss, her journalism around commercial wellness products, and the woman we all wonder about: Jean.