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Eat This Book
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    Eat This Book

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    Eat This Book
    Eat This Book.jpg
    First edition cover
    Author Ryan Nerz
    Cover artist Philip Pascuzzo
    Country United States
    Language English
    Subject Competitive eating
    Publisher St. Martin's Press
    Publication date
    April 2006
    Media type Print (Hardback & Paperback)
    Pages ix, 308 pp
    ISBN 0-312-33968-2
    OCLC 62084428
    641.01/3 22
    LC Class TX631 .N47 2006

    Eat This Book is a book by Ryan Nerz which explores the world of competitive eating. Published by St. Martin's Press in 2006, Eat This Book provides a firsthand look into this sometimes controversial sport. Nerz, who spent a year as an emcee for the International Federation of Competitive Eating, has firsthand insight into the competitive eating phenomenon.

    Reviews

    Because Nerz's book was released in the same month as Jason Fagone's Horsemen of the Esophagus, and since both books cover the sport of competitive eating, a number of published reviews covered both books together and drew comparisons between them.

    The strongest criticism levelled at Eat This Book in reviews is that Nerz uses prose that is more sensational than objective. Jay Jennings describes Nerz as "more mythifier than journalist", and Booklist critiqued his book as "basically a book-length infomercial for the organization and its most famous athletes."

    Despite this negative criticism, other reviewers found the direct involvement by Nerz, and first-hand account of his own personal quest to become a competitive participant both absorbing and entertaining. Jennings commends Nerz for presenting a broader cast of characters who participate in the sport, even though Nerz's book covers a narrower view of the sport than Fagone's Horsemen of the Esophagus. Nerz was able to provide increased coverage of the competitors as a result of emceeing many contests, and therefore obtaining direct access to many competitors that Fagone did not have. The book's breadth of coverage, both in terms of contests arranged neatly by chapter and in terms of the number of competitors, was also noted positively in other reviews.

    The Publishers Weekly review of the book said that “Nerz chronicles his amusing adventures in the perverse, repellent, strangely heroic world of competitive eating…with glee and good humor.” The New York Times Book Review compared the author’s style to that of Grantland Rice, an early 20th-century American sportswriter known for his elegant prose. Calling the author “more mythifier than journalist,” the Times Book Review added that the competitive eaters he profiled “are indeed a colorful, varied bunch, even without the pro-wrestling-style personalities the IFOCE encourages.”

    Nerz appeared on The Daily Show with Jon Stewart on April 18, 2006, to discuss the book. [1]


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