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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Samira KawashPublisher: Farrar, Straus and Giroux Imprint: Farrar, Straus and Giroux Dimensions: Width: 14.00cm , Height: 2.40cm , Length: 21.60cm Weight: 0.544kg ISBN: 9780865478176ISBN 10: 0865478171 Pages: 428 Publication Date: 14 October 2014 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order ![]() We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsKawash dives deep into the American relationship with candy, finding irrational and interesting ideas everywhere . . . [She is] interested in untangling the threads of control, danger and temptation that candy has carried since it became widely available in the 1880s. --Julia Moskin, The New York Times Lively, engaging, deliciously descriptive . . . Kawash makes a balanced case against accepting ultraprocessed foods at face value. With a helpful heaping of information in every verbal bite, this fascinating social and culinary history gives readers a deeper understanding of the powerful forces at work behind the brightly colored wrappers. --Bridget Thoreson, Booklist (starred review) [The] future, of course, is now, when so-called granola bars, breakfast bars, and energy bars are, in fact, candy bars . . . None of these things, enriched to the hilt though they may be, are any better for us than a Snickers bar. Nor, for the most part, are cookies with whole grains in them, or 'fruit' snacks for children, which Kawash refers to, in what may be my favorite phrase in any book ever, as 'candy training pants'. . . Marvelous. --Melanie Rehak, Bookforum This title is no insubstantial confection. Its thoroughness and documentation will appeal to those with an avid interest in the history of candy consumption and American culture. --Courtney Greene, Library Journal If you're a self-admitted, guilt-ridden sweet-tooth, perhaps Samira Kawash's Candy: A Century of Panic and Pleasure will soothe your jangled nerves. Even if you're not, Candy is still an eye-opening, myth-busting and, simply enough, interesting read. --Leslie Ken Chu, Vancouver Weekly Though the subject matter may be fluffy, the treatment is substantive and significant, representing an important contribution to the literature about what, and how, we eat in 21st-century America.. -- Kirkus Reviews (starred review) In her proficient cultural study, n Lively, engaging, deliciously descriptive . . . Kawash makes a balanced case against accepting ultraprocessed foods at face value. With a helpful heaping of information in every verbal bite, this fascinating social and culinary history gives readers a deeper understanding of the powerful forces at work behind the brightly colored wrappers. --Bridget Thoreson, Booklist (starred review) Sweetly exhaustive social history . . . The author makes able use of her learning to illuminate these matters in prose that is blessedly free of jaw-busting jargon. --Daniel Akst, The Wall Street Journal [The] future, of course, is now, when so-called granola bars, breakfast bars, and energy bars are, in fact, candy bars . . . None of these things, enriched to the hilt though they may be, are any better for us than a Snickers bar. Nor, for the most part, are cookies with whole grains in them, or 'fruit' snacks for children, which Kawash refers to, in what may be my favorite phrase in any book ever, as 'candy training pants'. . . Marvelous. --Melanie Rehak, Bookforum This title is no insubstantial confection. Its thoroughness and documentation will appeal to those with an avid interest in the history of candy consumption and American culture. --Courtney Greene, Library Journal If you're a self-admitted, guilt-ridden sweet-tooth, perhaps Samira Kawash's Candy: A Century of Panic and Pleasure will soothe your jangled nerves. Even if you're not, Candy is still an eye-opening, myth-busting and, simply enough, interesting read. --Leslie Ken Chu, Vancouver Weekly Kawash dives deep into the American relationship with candy, finding irrational and interesting ideas everywhere . . . [She is] interested in untangling the threads of control, danger and temptation that candy has carried since it became widely available in the 1880s. --Julia Moskin, The New York Times Though the subject matter may be fluffy, the treatment is substantive and significant, representing an important contribution to the literature about what, and how, we eat in 21st-century America.. -- Kirkus (starred review) In her proficient cultural study, Kawash looks at the manipulation of glucose, fructose, and creative derivatives of corn and soy in the ever-more-pervasive move toward processed foods, which blurs the definition of candy. -- Publisher's Weekly In this delightful, intriguing account of candy in the United States, Samira Kawash argues that we must stop vilifying this sugary treat and start taking it more seriously--as a cultural icon, a marker of gender identity, a prototype of the marketing of processed foods, a source of pleasure for children and adults, and, for good or ill, a contributor to daily diets. --Marion Nestle, Paulette Goddard Professor of Nutrition, Food Studies, and Public Health, New York University, and author of What to Eat This fun and substantive guide is a unique take on the history of candy, examining every argument and complementing candy lovers' belief in 'excess in moderation'. --Dylan Lauren, owner of Dylan's Candy Bar In a book that's both erudite and entertaining, Samira Kawash explores the history of candy and candified food--and comes down on the side of candy. --Jeri Quinzio, author of Of Sugar and Snow: A History of Ice Cream Making Lively, engaging, deliciously descriptive . . . Kawash makes a balanced case against accepting ultraprocessed foods at face value. With a helpful heaping of information in every verbal bite, this fascinating social and culinary history gives readers a deeper understanding of the powerful forces at work behind the brightly colored wrappers. --Bridget Thoreson, Booklist (starred review) Sweetly exhaustive social history . . . The author makes able use of her learning to illuminate these matters in prose that is blessedly free of jaw-busting jargon. --Daniel Akst, The Wall Street Journal [The] future, of course, is now, when so-called granola bars, breakfast bars, and energy bars are, in fact, candy bars . . . None of these things, enriched to the hilt though they may be, are any better for us than a Snickers bar. Nor, for the most part, are cookies with whole grains in them, or 'fruit' snacks for children, which Kawash refers to, in what may be my favorite phrase in any book ever, as 'candy training pants'. . . Marvelous. --Melanie Rehak, Bookforum This title is no insubstantial confection. Its thoroughness and documentation will appeal to those with an avid interest in the history of candy consumption and American culture. --Courtney Greene, Library Journal If you're a self-admitted, guilt-ridden sweet-tooth, perhaps Samira Kawash's Candy: A Century of Panic and Pleasure will soothe your jangled nerves. Even if you're not, Candy is still an eye-opening, myth-busting and, simply enough, interesting read. --Leslie Ken Chu, Vancouver Weekly Kawash dives deep into the American relationship with candy, finding irrational and interesting ideas everywhere . . . [She is] interested in untangling the threads of control, danger and temptation that candy has carried since it became widely available in the 1880s. --Julia Moskin, The New York Times Though the subject matter may be fluffy, the treatment is substantive and significant, representing an Lively, engaging, deliciously descriptive . . . Kawash makes a balanced case against accepting ultraprocessed foods at face value. With a helpful heaping of information in every verbal bite, this fascinating social and culinary history gives readers a deeper understanding of the powerful forces at work behind the brightly colored wrappers. --Bridget Thoreson, Booklist (starred review) Sweetly exhaustive social history . . . The author makes able use of her learning to illuminate these matters in prose that is blessedly free of jaw-busting jargon. --Daniel Akst, The Wall Street Journal [The] future, of course, is now, when so-called granola bars, breakfast bars, and energy bars are, in fact, candy bars . . . None of these things, enriched to the hilt though they may be, are any better for us than a Snickers bar. Nor, for the most part, are cookies with whole grains in them, or 'fruit' snacks for children, which Kawash refers to, in what may be my favorite phrase in any book ever, as 'candy training pants'. . . Marvelous. --Melanie Rehak, Bookforum This title is no insubstantial confection. Its thoroughness and documentation will appeal to those with an avid interest in the history of candy consumption and American culture. --Courtney Greene, Library Journal If you're a self-admitted, guilt-ridden sweet-tooth, perhaps Samira Kawash's Candy: A Century of Panic and Pleasure will soothe your jangled nerves. Even if you're not, Candy is still an eye-opening, myth-busting and, simply enough, interesting read. --Leslie Ken Chu, Vancouver Weekly Kawash dives deep into the American relationship with candy, finding irrational and interesting ideas everywhere . . . [She is] interested in untangling the threads of control, danger and temptation that candy has carried since it became widely available in the 1880s. --Julia Moskin, The New York Times Though the subject matter may be fluffy, the treatment is substantive and significant, representing an important contribution to the literature about what, and how, we eat in 21st-century America.. -- Kirkus (starred review) In her proficient cultural study, Kawash looks at the manipulation of glucose, fructose, and creative derivatives of corn and soy in the ever-more-pervasive move toward processed foods, which blurs the definition of candy. -- Publisher's Weekly In this delightful, intriguing account of candy in the United States, Samira Kawash argues that we must stop vilifying this sugary treat and start taking it more seriously--as a cultural icon, a marker of gender identity, a prototype of the marketing of processed foods, a source of pleasure for children and adults, and, for good or ill, a contributor to daily diets. --Marion Nestle, Paulette Goddard Professor of Nutrition, Food Studies, and Public Health, New York University, and author of What to Eat This fun and substantive guide is a unique take on the history of candy, examining every argument and complementing candy lovers' belief in 'excess in moderation'. --Dylan Lauren, owner of Dylan's Candy Bar In a book that's both erudite and entertaining, Samira Kawash explores the history of candy and candified food--and comes down on the side of candy. --Jeri Quinzio, author of Of Sugar and Snow: A History of Ice Cream Making Lively, engaging, deliciously descriptive . . . Kawash makes a balanced case against accepting ultraprocessed foods at face value. With a helpful heaping of information in every verbal bite, this fascinating social and culinary history gives readers a deeper understanding of the powerful forces at work behind the brightly colored wrappers. <i>Bridget Thoreson, Booklist (starred review)</i></p> Sweetly exhaustive social history . . . The author makes able use of her learning to illuminate these matters in prose that is blessedly free of jaw-busting jargon. <i>Daniel Akst, The Wall Street Journal</i></p> [The] future, of course, is now, when so-called granola bars, breakfast bars, and energy bars are, in fact, candy bars . . . None of these things, enriched to the hilt though they may be, are any better for us than a Snickers bar. Nor, for the most part, are cookies with whole grains in them, or fruit' snacks for children, which Kawash refers to, in what may be my favorite phrase in any book ever, as candy training pants'. . . Marvelous. <i>Melanie Rehak, Bookforum</i></p> This title is no insubstantial confection. Its thoroughness and documentation will appeal to those with an avid interest in the history of candy consumption and American culture. <i>Courtney Greene, Library Journal</i></p> If you're a self-admitted, guilt-ridden sweet-tooth, perhaps Samira Kawash's <i>Candy: A Century of Panic and Pleasure</i> will soothe your jangled nerves. Even if you're not, Candy is still an eye-opening, myth-busting and, simply enough, interesting read. <i>Leslie Ken Chu, Vancouver Weekly</i></p> Kawash dives deep into the American relationship with candy, finding irrational and interesting ideas everywhere . . . [She is] interested in untangling the threads of control, danger and temptation that candy has carried since it became widely available in the 1880s. <i>Julia Moskin, The New York Times</i></p> Though the subject matter may be fluffy, the treatment is substantive and significant, representing an important contribution to the literature about what, and how, we eat in 21st-century America.. <i>Kirkus (starred review)</i></p> In her proficient cultural study, Kawash looks at the manipulation of glucose, fructose, and creative derivatives of corn and soy in the ever-more-pervasive move toward processed foods, which blurs the definition of candy. <i>Publisher's Weekly</i></p> In this delightful, intriguing account of candy in the United States, Samira Kawash argues that we must stop vilifying this sugary treat and start taking it more seriously--as a cultural icon, a marker of gender identity, a prototype of the marketing of processed foods, a source of pleasure for children and adults, and, for good or ill, a contributor to daily diets. <i>Marion Nestle, Paulette Goddard Professor of Nutrition, Food Studies, and Public Health, New York University, and author of What to Eat</i></p> This fun and substantive guide is a unique take on the history of candy, examining every argument and complementing candy lovers' belief in excess in moderation'. <i>Dylan Lauren, owner of Dylan's Candy Bar</i></p> In a book that's both erudite and entertaining, Samira Kawash explores the history of candy and candified food--and comes down on the side of candy. <i>Jeri Quinzio, author of Of Sugar and Snow: A History of Ice Cream Making</i></p> Author InformationSamira Kawash has a PhD in literary studies from Duke University and is a professor emerita at Rutgers University. She is the author of Dislocating the Color Line and the founder of the website Candyprofessor.com. Kawash lives in Brooklyn, New York. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |