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Harvey
Diamond is one of the most celebrated and
successful health authors in history - certainly one of today's
truly great health thinkers.
He has been studying and teaching the principles of healthful
living for nearly 40 years and is recognized as one of the
most effective and well-respected authors on the subject of
health in the world. He is considered to be one of the original
pioneers credited with helping shift people toward a healthier
eating lifestyle.
Owing to his forward thinking, innovative approach to health
and well being his FIT FOR LIFE books have
sold over 12 million copies in 33 languages and are read in
over 80 countries. He has helped literally millions of people
worldwide to not only dramatically improve their health, but
also to overcome serious, catastrophic disease, including
cancer.
The original FIT FOR LIFE book was only one
of four books to sell 2 million hardcover copies in the entire
decade of the 1980s and was fourth in total U.S. non-fiction
sales in that decade. The book continued to break records
in the 1990s, is still in high demand on Amazon, and still
sells 100,000 copies a year worldwide. It held the #1 position
on the prestigious New York Times Bestseller list for an unprecedented
40 consecutive weeks, and held bestseller status in USA Today,
Time Magazine, the Los Angeles Times Book Review, Publishers
Weekly and the San Francisco Chronicle Review, to name only
a few. In 1986 it achieved the coveted position on the Publisher's
Weekly Top 25 Bestselling Books in Publishing History List,
along with "Gone with the Wind" and the Bible.
During
this time, Harvey made multiple appearances on Oprah Winfrey,
Larry King, Phil Donahue, Nightline, Geraldo Rivera, Merv
Griffin, The Regis and Kathy Lee Show, Good Morning America,
The Today Show, Sally Jesse Raphael, QVC, Pat Robertson's
700 Club and many others. Introducing his appearance on ABC’s
Nightline with Ted Koppel, it was stated that his book was
the fastest selling book of its kind in history. In 1989 informal
research by The New York based Saatchi and Saatchi found that
for every one person who had purchased FIT FOR LIFE,
five additional people potentially were affected. Another
informal survey in the 1990s revealed that approximately 65%
of American adults had at least heard of FIT FOR LIFE.
FIT FOR LIFE spawned juice and salad bars,
fruit sellers on the streets of New York, and the juicing
industry; at one point causing demand to exceed production
for a major juicer manufacturer. It was a pivotal force in
the advent of the natural food supermarket and the explosion
of natural food consumption nationwide. Newsweek Magazine
attributed, at least in part, an 11% increase in vegetable
consumption and a 7% increase in fruit consumption to the FIT FOR LIFE phenomenon. The book was a trigger
for Surgeon General Koop's New Dietary Guidelines for the
American people and launched a nutritional awakening in the
United States and other Western countries.
In a stunning validation of his methods, Harvey triumphed
over a devastating condition called Peripheral Neuropathy,
brought on by Agent Orange poisoning while serving his country
in Vietnam. Although he has significant lingering damage to
his musculature, thanks to his considerable understanding
of the human body and its proper care, he is one of the longest
known survivors of this devastating condition to still be
walking around on his own without assistance. Despite his
physical challenges Harvey is as positive, upbeat, and good
natured a person as you will ever meet. He is an inspiration
to all who meet him.
A primary reason for Harvey Diamond's phenomenal success lies
not only in his ability to simplify seemingly complicated
subjects with common sense information that helps people,
but it is also his engaging writing style. His style is conversational
and totally non-technical. In his words, "I don't write
for doctors and scientists, I write for folks. You won't need
a dictionary by your side in order to understand what you
read."
His words seem to come alive and jump right off the page at
you. His reader-friendly, light-hearted, frequently humorous
approach to writing make many a reader comment that, "It's
almost as though he's sitting in your living room having a
conversation with you. It reads more like a novel than a health
book." |