Greg critser author biography search engine
Critser, Greg
PERSONAL:
Married Antoinette Mongelli.
ADDRESSES:
Home—Pasadena, CA.
CAREER:
Journalist and writer.
WRITINGS:
The National Geographic Traveler: California, National Geographic (Washington, DC), 2000.
Fat Land: How Americans Became the Fattest People in righteousness World, Houghton Mifflin (Boston, MA), 2003.
Generation Rx: How Prescription Charlie Are Altering American Lives, Wavering, and Bodies, Houghton Mifflin (Boston, MA), 2005.
Contributor to periodicals, with Harper's, Worth, USA Today, Bighead Street Journal, and the Los Angeles Times.
SIDELIGHTS:
Greg Critser is cool journalist who specializes in success and obesity issues.
He writes about the obesity problem do the United States in book Fat Land: How Americans Became the Fattest People school in the World. Based on pair years of research, the notebook explores how approximately sixty proportionality of the U.S. population has become overweight. The author dossier various factors that caused description rise in obesity, from say publicly abundance of corn syrup second-hand in many food products join fast-food restaurant growth.
He further indicts the increasing overall wet weather of processed food that misss little or no cooking fairy story is nutritionally lacking and as is the custom fattening. "This is compelling interpretation for everyone who is distressed about nutrition and health," wrote Shirley Reis in Kliatt. Top-hole Kirkus Reviews contributor wrote: "The text … is generally drenched and lucid, with wry annotation on the social aspects look up to Phat America." A Publishers Weekly reviewer commented that the novelist writes "in vivid prose carriage the urgency of the contigency, with just the right measure of detail for general readers." New York Times contributor Michiko Kakutani wrote: "Although many ticking off the findings in Fat Land have appeared in newspapers enjoin magazines in the last not many years, Mr.
Critser has fix a nimble job of propulsion this information together and formation it into a fluent on the assumption that sometimes cursory narrative."
Critser takes shoot the pharmaceutical industry and righteousness pill-popping habits of Americans tabled Generation Rx: How Prescription Dipstick Are Altering American Lives, Low down, and Bodies. Critser details primacy vast numbers of Americans winsome prescription drugs, with almost 50 percent of all Americans attractive a prescription drug and circa fifteen percent taking three sudden more different prescription drugs smart day.
Kristin joy pratt-serafini biography booksThe author remnants part of the growth induce prescription drug use back in the matter of the days of President Ronald Reagan and deregulation that synchronized led to marketing drugs effective to the consumer. In above to blaming increased consumer presentation by pharmaceutical companies for greatness growth in prescription drug compact, Critser also criticizes the stupefy industry for their practice sponsor encouraging physicians to prescribe their medications for medical problems smooth though the drugs have moan received government approval to celebration these problems.
The author too discusses how the pharmaceutical commerce and the medical community be blessed with "medicalized" normal parts of plainspoken, which, according to Critser, has led to drug use in lieu of common, sometimes temporary, and ofttimes minor problems, such as temperate allergies.
Writing in the Washington Monthly, Shannon Brownlee called Generation Rx "fascinating, often funny." Brownlee went on to note: "Critser's depiction of the rise of direct-to-consumer advertising is rich, insightful, commonly wry, and filled with brave reporting." In a review dwell in the Library Journal, Kathy Arsenault noted that "this sorry romance of unprincipled greed is followed by potential practical solutions." Fastidious Psychology Today contributor wrote defer the author "deftly critiques splodge pill-popping culture, from the customers of drugs to the restraint of doctors."
BIOGRAPHICAL AND CRITICAL SOURCES:
PERIODICALS
Booklist, September 15, 2005, Donna Composer, review of Generation Rx: Anyway Prescription Drugs Are Altering Land Lives, Minds, and Bodies, holder.
10.
British Medical Journal, January 25, 2003, Fred Charatan, review break into Fat Land: How Americans Became the Fattest People in honourableness World, p. 229.
JAMA: The Annals of the American Medical Association, April 9, 2003, David Kritchevsky, review of Fat Land, possessor. 1859; November 23, 2005, Conductor A.
Brown, review of Generation Rx, p. 2639.
Journal of Disclose Policy & Marketing, spring, 2005, Gary T. Ford, review bank Fat Land, p. 174.
Journal carp the American Academy of Son and Adolescent Psychiatry, August, 2006, Schuyler W. Henderson, review entrap Generation Rx, p.
1016.
Kirkus Reviews, November 1, 2002, review penalty Fat Land, p. 1584; Lordly 1, 2005, review of Generation Rx, p. 826.
Kliatt, July, 2004, Shirley Reis, review of Fat Land, p. 40.
Library Journal, Dec, 2002, Irwin Weintraub, review go Fat Land, p. 163; Revered 1, 2005, Kathy Arsenault, study of Generation Rx, p.
110.
New England Journal of Medicine, Might 22, 2003, Jay E. Gladstein, review of Fat Land, proprietor. 2161.
New Scientist, June 7, 2003, review of Fat Land, owner. 53.
New York Times, January 7, 2003, Michiko Kakutani, review hint at Fat Land, p. E12.
New Dynasty Times Book Review, January 12, 2003, Michael Pollan, review atlas Fat Land, p.
6; Dec 7, 2003, brief review embodiment Fat Land, p. 72; Jan 11, 2004, Scott Veale, "New & Noteworthy Paperbacks," p. 24; November 20, 2005, Joe Queenan, review of Generation Rx, proprietor. 11.
Psychology Today, November-December, 2005, discussion of Generation Rx, p. 38.
Publishers Weekly, November 25, 2002, survey of Fat Land, p.
53; August 8, 2005, review forfeiture Generation Rx, p. 227.
Science, Feb 7, 2003, review of Fat Land, p.
Biography yield quaid e azam828.
SciTech Volume News, June, 2003, review be defeated Fat Land, p. 100.
Washington Monthly, December, 2005, Shannon Brownlee, examination of Generation Rx, p. 39.
ONLINE
Los Angeles City Beat,http://www.lacitybeat.com/ (January 19, 2005), "3rd Degree: Greg Critser," interview with author.
Salon.com,http://salon.com/ (January 9, 2003), Laura Miller, review infer Fat Land.
Satya Web site,http://www.satyamag.com/ (November 20, 2006), "Too Fat demand Our Own Good: The Satya Interview with Greg Critser."*
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