12 Sep 2011 3 Comments
Did “Maggie Goes On a Diet” go too far?
Should girls be dieting?
Last month a firestorm of controversy arose over the book “Maggie Goes on a Diet.” Many were outraged by the book’s topic claiming that it taught children “self-hate” and was “anorexia bait.” Yet childhood obesity is a real issue in this country. Of the many articles written on the debate, this one from the Washington Post actually addresses the issue of obesity instead of just attacking the subject of the book.
By Janice D’Arcy; The Washington Post
A book intended to help children that’s due to be published this fall has already sparked a controversy in parenting and health circles. “Maggie Goes on a Diet,” (Aloha Publishers, October 2011) tells the story of a 14-year-old girl who is overweight and unhappy. The girl diets, loses weight and finds success and popularity in school.
Author Paul Kramer has said his intent was to write a story with an important message to children about eating properly and maintaining a healthy physique, especially given the obesity epidemic. But his little book has landed with a loud thud. Experts have almost universally condemned it as sending the wrong message.
One of those critics is Karen Schachter, a Washington expert in the psychology of eating who runs Dishing With Your Daughter, a program of coaching, classes and workshops for mothers and daughters on healthy eating and body image.
I asked her why she thinks “Maggie Goes on a Diet,” and its encouragement of dieting, is misguided.



“Mommy, would you drink the water?”























