Whole Life Magazine

October/November 2013

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hot off the press WORTH REPEATING "THE SEXIEST THING IN By Abigail Lewis You might think the Internet would put cookbooks out of business, but if it's made a dent, you'd never know it by our mailbox. With so many intriguing options, we had a difficult time choosing favorites. Which is your top pick? BAKE AND DESTROY Good Food for Bad Vegans Natalie Slater We love this book—who doesn't enjoy being a little bad? Still, if you stick to the recipes in this delightful compendium, you'll be a lot healthier than most of the world. (Page Street) THE EAT-A-BUG COOKBOOK 40 Ways to Cook Crickets, Grasshoppers, Ants and more David George Gordon An entertaining book that tells how to grow and prepare the little pests, but not how to catch them. Not food for vegans but a better solution than pesticides. (Ten Speed Press) THE RAWVOLUTION CONTINUES The Living Foods Movement in 150 Natural and Delicious Recipes Matt and Janabai Amsden Owners of the beloved store/eatery by the same name in Santa Monica, the Amsdens offer more than 150 raw recipes for truly natural health. These folks are the real deal, you can't go wrong. (Atria) RAW VEGAN EASY HEALTHY RECIPES Simple, Low-fat, Health-infusing Cuisine John McCabe John McCabe is an expert on raw foods and where to find them. If you're vegan and missed his Sun Food Traveler, pick that one up too. It's an essential road book. (Carmania) WILD EDIBLES A Practical Guide to Foraging Sergei Boutenko Nutrient data, cautions on identifying, recipes, uses… everything you need to know to stay alive in the wild. As the American Express card used to say, "Don't leave home without it." (North Atlantic Books) THE ALZHEIMER'S PREVENTION COOKBOOK Recipes to Boost Brain Health Dr. Marwan Sabbagh and Beau MacMillan The dementia rate among the elderly is dropping but it's still close to 20 percent. There's no reason not to follow these recipes to brain health. (Ten Speed Press) For additional exciting new titles, see an expanded list at www.wholelifemagazine.com 12 the entire world is being smart, and thoughtful, and generous. Everything else is crap." —Actor Ashton Kutcher at the Teen Choice Awards. (Entertainment Weekly, 8/12) "WE WOULD LIKE FOR the day to come when it's not news anymore, when two women sitting side by side, who have the depth of experience that Judy [Woodruff] and I bring to the task at hand, would just be another thing that girls see every day." —Incoming PBS NewsHour co-anchor Gwen Ifill (PBS.org, 8/08) "I DON'T WANT TO SLEEP next to something that is a charged ball of information with photos and e-mails." —Fashion designer Peter Som, who recharges his cell phone in the living room. ("Step Away from the Phone!" New York Times, 9/20) "MAY YOU ALWAYS REMEMBER that obstacles in the path are not obstacles, they ARE the path." —Note to her children in her self-written obituary by author Jane Catherine Lotter, RIP. (Huffingtonpost.com, 8/06) "THE CHURCH'S PASTORAL ministry cannot be obsessed with the transmission of a disjointed multitude of doctrines to be imposed insistently." — Recently elected Roman Catholic Pope Francis chiding his flock to focus on those who need healing rather than on sex-related issues. (New York Times, 9/19) "LIVE EVERY DAY AS IF it's your last and whoever doesn't like it can go fuck themselves and a rubber duck." —John Woltowicz, aka The Dog, subject of a new film on his infamous crime of robbing a bank to finance his lover's sex-reassignment surgery—the basis of the film Dog Day Afternoon. (Press release, 8/22) wholelifetimesmagazine.com WLT-Oct-Nov-9-28.indd 12 9/30/13 11:18 AM

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