- Unknown Binding: 434 pages
- Publisher: W.H. Freeman and Co (2000)
- Language English
- ASIN: B0006RDN2O
- Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
- See Complete Table of Contents
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After taking us through the results of stress - impotence, weight problems, reduced growth, heart trouble and much more - the book thankfully ends with some well researched tips on how to cope with stress... like a zebra.
This is a book that I would read again, just for the entertainment value, and never cease to recommend to friends and colleagues.
The book is mostly for professional persons, who are interested in all the physiological names and functions. This is not a book for people just interested in how stress works, because of all the latin and theories.
Sapolsky has a true talent for simplifying the complex, without patronizing the reader or diluting the facts. Even with a few years of vet school behind me, I still found myself learning something from every page. Not only that, but I was looking forward to reading each page, wondering what hilarious story or anecdote would come next.
I wish I had read Dr. Sapolsky's work before I had taken first-year physiology. I would have been far better off.
[As a side note, I was touched by the dedication.]
Sapolosky addressed all of my difficult questions and some that I hadn't thought of. His easy to read style and humourous personality makes his serious topic more appealing.
Cardiologists in my area do not accept stress as one of the major risk factors in heart disease. Having had virtually ongoing job stress and periodic family crises such depression, a brain tumour, job loss, involuntary job reassignments and now bonafide heart disease, it is my personal phsyican's opinion that "stress" is one of the major factors of heart disease and also plays a role in other serious diseases such as ulcers, colitis, memory, sex and aging and depression.
Saplolsky addresses the main questions and issues in a very readable and guides the reader to options and solutions for developing a personal action plan.
Highly recommended to spouses, supporters and people who are willing to acknowledge that stress might be a factor in their health.
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