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How Not to Die: Revised and Updated by Michael Greger & Gene Stone Review: A Science-Backed Nutrition Classic, Refreshed
How Not to Die: Revised and Updated is a New York Times bestseller by physician Michael Greger, M.D. FACLM, and co-author Gene Stone, now available as an audiobook from Macmillan Audio narrated by Greger himself. The book makes the case that the fifteen leading causes of disease-related death are largely preventable through diet and lifestyle, marshalling peer-reviewed scientific evidence to identify the foods and habits designed to extend healthy life. This review is based on the book's content and published reception, not hands-on use.
LuvemBooks Verdict
Best for
Health-motivated readers who want a rigorous, peer-reviewed, disease-by-disease case for whole-food, plant-based eating — and are ready to commit to nearly nineteen hours of densely evidenced argument rather than a quick prescriptive plan.
Worth it if
You want a thoroughly researched, science-grounded foundation for rethinking your diet and are willing to engage with a structured, reference-style book that covers all fifteen leading causes of disease-related death plus a wide sweep of updated lifestyle topics.
Skip if
You're looking for a balanced survey of competing dietary philosophies, a light quick-start guide, or a shorter read — the book is unapologetically partisan toward one dietary framework and exhaustive in its depth.
What readers & critics say
Wikipedia confirms the original edition was a New York Times bestseller and that the book argues the health benefits of a whole-food, plant-based diet. Barnes & Noble surfaces endorsements from Dan Buettner (author of The Blue Zones Solution), who called it "absolutely the best book I've read on nutrition and diet," and from Dean Ornish, M.D., who described it as "extraordinary and empowering" — reflecting the strong reception the book has maintained among physicians and longevity researchers since its 2015 debut.
Sources: Wikipedia, Barnes & NobleIn This Review
- What Works & What Doesn't
- What the Book Is and What It Argues
- Scope and New Material in the Revised Edition
- Greger's Approach: Evidence, Structure, and Voice
- Reception and Cultural Standing
- Who This Book Is For — and Where It May Challenge Readers
What Works & What Doesn't
What Works
- Thoroughly updated for the tenth anniversary, adding new research on COVID-19, mental health, air pollution, cancer screening, and more
- Narrated by Greger himself, lending the audiobook immediate authority and the persuasive energy of its physician-author's own voice
- Organized disease by disease across fifteen leading causes of death, making a dense body of science concrete and navigable
- Grounded in peer-reviewed research and Greger's work at the nonprofit NutritionFacts.org, with no commercial sponsors or brand partnerships
- A New York Times bestseller with a decade of established readership behind it
What Doesn't
- At nearly nineteen hours, the unabridged audiobook demands sustained commitment and may feel exhaustive for casual listeners
- The book argues strongly for one dietary framework rather than presenting a balanced survey of competing nutrition perspectives, which will not suit every reader

What the Book Is and What It Argues
Scope and New Material in the Revised Edition
Greger's Approach: Evidence, Structure, and Voice
Reception and Cultural Standing
Who This Book Is For — and Where It May Challenge Readers
Frequently Asked Questions
Sources & Further Reading
The key facts and claims in this review are grounded in the retrieved, verified sources listed below.
- Cited in this review
- 1
us.macmillan.com
- 2
- Further reading
- 3
- 4
- 5
- 6
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