Join my By Any Greens Necessary fan page on Facebook! The book comes out on May 1, 2010 and my goal is to get at least 1000 folks to join the fan page between now and then to help create buzz for the book. So please join my fan page and tell your Facebook friends about it, too.
You can also pre-order the book now on Amazon here. Here’s a brief book description and bio from Amazon:
ABOUT THE BOOK:
With attitude and inspiration, this lifestyle guide shows black women how they can be healthy, hippy, and happy by eating plenty of fresh fruits and vegetables, whole grains, and legumes as part of an active lifestyle. African American women face a health crisis and explosive rates of death and disability from heart disease, stroke, and diabetes, and this book provides authoritative research to illustrate how a plant-based diet can reverse this trend.
Encouraging readers to think about the foods they choose and what their choices mean to overall health, the manual shows that a diet of meat, fish, fowl, dairy, and refined grains is hazardous not only to human bodies but also to the planet and animals. With its much-needed nutritional analysis, the book also offers practical advice about how to transition to vegan foods; delicious and nutritious recipes; a comprehensive grocery shopping list for restocking the fridge and pantry; recommended resources; and inspirational vegetarian quotes from famous African Americans, including Oprah Winfrey, Alice Walker, Angela Bassett, Erykah Badu, Russell Simmons, and Dick Gregory.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
Tracye McQuirter, a nutritionist who leads worldwide seminars on vegan nutrition, has been featured in dozens of media, including Essence, the Washington Post, and Black Press USA. A 20-year vegan and a former contributing writer for Heart and Soul, the largest health-and-fitness magazine for African American women, McQuirter founded the Black Vegetarian Society of New York, directed the nation’s first federally funded vegan nutrition program, and worked on legislation to improve federal nutrition guidelines.
She currently promotes school-based initiatives to reverse childhood obesity and has served as a nutrition consultant for the Black Women’s Health Imperative, the largest health advocacy organization for black women and girls. A graduate of Amherst College and New York University, where she received her master’s of public health nutrition, McQuirter lives in Washington, D.C.
Thank you very much for your support!










{ 0 comments… add one now }