Fiction Bond Street
Books Hardcover, 304 pages August 2005
$32.95 0-385-66115-0
ABOUT THE BOOK
“Hunger is the loudest voice in my head. I’m
hungry most of the time.”
William Leith began the eighties slim; by the end
of that decade he had packed on an uncomfortable amount
of weight. In the early nineties, he was slim again,
but his weight began to creep up once more. On January
20th, 2003, he woke up on the fattest day of his life.
That same day he left London for New York to interview
controversial diet guru Dr. Robert Atkins. But what
was meant to be a routine journalistic assignment
set Leith on an intensely personal and illuminating
journey into the mysteries of hunger and addiction.
From his many years as a journalist, Leith knows
that being fat is something people find more difficult
to talk about than nearly anything else. But in The
Hungry Years he does precisely that. Leith
uses his own pathological relationship with food as
a starting point and reveals himself, driven to the
kitchen first thing in the morning to inhale slice
after slice of buttered toast, wracked by a physical
and emotional need that only food can satisfy. He
travels through fast food-scented airports and coffee
shops as he explores the all-encompassing power of
advertising and the unattainable notions of physical
perfection that feed the multibillion dollar diet
industry.
Fat has been called a feminist issue: William Leith’s
unblinking look at the physical consequences and psychological
pain of being an overweight man charts fascinating
new territory for everyone who has ever had a craving
or counted a calorie. The Hungry Years
is a story of food, fat, and addiction that is both
funny and heartwrenching.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
photo credit: Harry Borden
William Leith is one of Britain’s best-known journalists.
He has written about subjects as divergent as cosmetic
surgery, Palestine, Hollywood directors, and drugs.
He writes regularly for the Guardian, the Observer,
and the Daily Telegraph. |