A Sunday Times bestseller from the author featured on Netflixβs Hack Your Health β now in its 10th Anniversary edition.
Our gut is as important as our brain or heart, yet we know very little about how it works and many of us are too embarrassed to ask questions.
In Gut, Giulia Enders breaks this taboo, revealing the latest science on how much our digestive system has to offer.
From our miraculous gut bacteria β which can play a part in obesity, allergies, depression and even Alzheimerβs β to the best position to poo, this entertaining and informative health handbook shows that we can all benefit from getting to know the wondrous world of our inner workings.
Winner of Australian Book Industry Awards, International Book of the Year 2016 Short-listed for British Book Industry Awards, Non-Fiction Book of the Year 2016 (UK) Long-listed for Goodreads Choice Awards 'Best Science & Technology Book' 2015 (United States)
β[Enders] is utterly, charmingly obsessed with the gut, gut bacteria, and poo. She writes and talks about her subject matter with such childlike enthusiasm itβs infectious β¦ The perfect toilet book.β
-- Annalisa Barbieri The Guardianβ[Gut] had me laughing aloud.β
βA publishing sensation that β¦ sets out to free toilet talk from its taboo.β
The TimesβBoth funny and informative, a brilliant examination of one of our most complex β and underappreciated β organs.β
The ObserverβEndersβ gut manifesto calls on its readers to celebrate their lower bodiesβ achievements, rather than apologise for them.β
-- Philip Oltermann GuardianβGiulia Enders has a warm and simple prose style and her sisterβs illustrations are delightful.β
-- William Cook SpectatorβThis book was a revelation; I couldnβt stop reading.β
-- Danny Katz The Saturday AgeβGiulia Enders takes a no-nonsense approach to bodily functions β¦ [Gut] reads like a breeze β¦ you can totally see why itβs been massive.β
Graziaβ[Enders is] a publishing sensation β¦ There is something compelling and refreshing about her curiosity and popular approach.β
-- Simon Usbourne The IndependentβA primer on poo β¦ Enders offers nuggets of wisdom on everything from the ideal position in which to evacuate your bowels to the science of fΓ¦ces identification β¦ There are some fascinating insights here β¦ Food for thought.β
Independent on SundayβThis book is brilliant: itβs so interesting about this massive, underrated organ we have. But it also asks fantastic questions about how the gut is linked to all sorts of things β not just allergies and sensitivities, but possible mental health. The thought that what we eat might affect our brains feels so astoundingly simple. And itβs a really fun read too.β
-- Emma Rice The ObserverβThe revelation that each of us depends on our individual living world, with far more inhabitants than there are people on earth, is surely sensational.β
-- Clive Cookson Financial TimesβThe worldβs most surprising page-turner.β
-- Anna Murphy The TimesβEnders, a German research microbiologist, obviously adores her subject matter β¦ [her] project is to show how those essential functions of the human body that some people may consider unseemly or unspeakable are in fact wondrous and worthy of exultation.β
-- Karen Hitchcock Weekend AustralianβThe best book Iβve read in the past year is Gut by Giulia Enders. It explains all one needs to know about the digestive cycle in order to lead a healthier and happier life.β
-- Interview with Claud Cecil Gurney Financial TimesβGut has more to offer than potty-language and a sense of humor β¦ Itβs hard not to be awed by Endersβ vast knowledge of anatomy and microbiology and share her fascination with the 100 trillion tiny creatures in our tummies.β
Beauty and WellbeingβAn amazing romp down our alimentary canal.β
New Scientist βBest Books of 2015ββA quirky tour of the gastro-intestinal tract.β
Sunday HeraldβGut caused a floodlight to turn on my head β¦ From this realisation, I developed my interest in fermented foods and drinks.β
-- Jo Webster WondergutβThe title covers the entire digestive tract-from the mouth and tonsils to the oesophagus to the small and large intestine, humorously lauding the elegance of the bowels. Along the way, the author covers myriad topics: the proper way to sit on a toilet, vomiting, constipation, faeces facts, and the influence the gut has on the brain β¦ a conversational approach to learning about the digestive system.β
-- Pauline Theriault Library JournalβEndersβs wonder at the strange ways of the gut is matched only by her incredulity at the limited public knowledge on the subject.β
-- Jesse Coburn The New York TimesβWith a great sense of humour and ample enthusiasm, Enders explains everything readers did and didnβt want to know about their innards β¦ this book defies boring.β
Publishers WeeklyβThis primer is everything you ever wanted to know about the gut (and then some), chattily and accessibly written in a uniquely Millennial and matter of fact way. An unexpected page turner β¦ Her excitement about the subject matter is infectious. The fun yet informative black and white drawings throughout are her sisterβs handiwork. Refreshingly devoid of recipes, or any self-help-y language.β
Self Magazine[A] truly bottoms-up approach to our digestive health, smoothly moving us through the inner workings of our gastrointestinal tract.β
-- Dr Anish Sheth, author of Whatβs Your Poo Telling YouβGut's probe into the human digestive system might be seen as an earnest younger sibling to Gulp, Mary Roachβs 2013 investigation into the same subject. The comparison isnβt meant as a slight; Enders swaps out Roachβs knowing wryness with a kind of puplike enthusiasm for the complex mechanisms that convert food into a bodyβs energy and waste without our even thinking about it.β
The National PostβGiulia Enders takes a deep dive into the fascinating connection between the gut and brain β¦ a must read.β
Press AssociationGiulia Enders received her medical degree from the University in Frankfurt am Main. She is a resident doctor for Internal Medicine and Gastroenterology.She is a double scholarship holder of the Wilhelm-und-Else-Heraeus-Foundation. In 2012 she won the first prize of the Science Slam in Berlin, Karlsruhe and Freiburg with her lecture βDarm Mit Charmeβ, which became a hit on youtube. Her book Darm Mit Charme has won several awards. Additionally, she was a columnist for Die Ziet.David Shaw works as a journalist for Germanyβs international broadcaster, Deutsche Welle, as well as translating from several languages, including German, Dutch, Russian, and French. He lives in Berlin.
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