Good Eater: The True Story of a Male Model's Struggle with Binge Eating Disorder

Hardback

Main Details

Title Good Eater: The True Story of a Male Model's Struggle with Binge Eating Disorder
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Ron Saxen
Physical Properties
Format:Hardback
Pages:296
Dimensions(mm): Height 210,Width 140
Category/GenreBiographies and autobiography
Coping with eating disorders
ISBN/Barcode 9781572244856
ClassificationsDewey:616.85260092
Audience
General
Illustrations Illustrations

Publishing Details

Publisher New Harbinger Publications
Imprint New Harbinger Publications
Publication Date 30 April 2007
Publication Country United States

Description

At the age of twenty-one, stylish and striking Ron Saxen turned heads on the street. A promising model with a California agency, his lithe and muscular body graced the pages of magazines and even the cover of a fitness book. He was headed for a future of bright lights and brighter possibilities - but a dark turn of events would leave Saxen working for minimum wage in a coffee shop and dodging his agent less than a year later. Binge eating disorder, a malady that strikes some 2.5 million Americans - 40 percent of whom are men - led Saxen to pack on nearly half again his body weight in unsightly fat, destroying his career and threatening his health and sanity. This compelling memoir tells Saxen's story as he grapples with binge eating, dangerous starvation diets, drug use and a roller coaster ride of crazy careers, unhealthy relationships and personal tragedies - all set against a fabulous backdrop that ranges from the Sunset Strip to the fundamentalist enclaves of the Great Plains. A gripping page-turner from start to finish, this amazing personal memoir will help break stereotypes and shed new light on this common disorder.

Reviews

The Good Eater is an honest, brave account of one man s difficult struggle with body image and food. I commend Ron Saxen for having the courage to write a book that reflects his personal battle with binge eating disorder. His honesty and openness can help the many men who suffer in silence with this problem, as well as educate others that eating disorders are not exclusive to one gender. Roberto Olivardia, Ph.D., clinical instructor in psychology in the Department of Psychiatry at Harvard Medical School and coauthor of The Adonis Complex "