Healthy Child has always advised consumers to be wise with plastics, which can often leach dangerous toxins. Baby's Toxic Bottle, a study by a team of US and Canadian researchers has shown that plastic polycarbonate baby bottles leach dangerous levels of Bisphenol-A (BPA) when heated. All five brands tested, including Evenflo and Gerber, leached BPA. Adults should also be aware of the dangers as popular "Nalgene" bottles and other water bottles are made of the same type of plastic.
BPA, a common component in clear plastics, is a hormone-disrupting synthetic estrogen. According to the study, even at very low doses, BPA's mimicry of estrogen resulted in an array of health maladies including prostate and breast cancer, early onset of puberty, obesity, hyperactivity, lowered sperm count, miscarriage, diabetes, and altered immune system in animal studies. The hormone-like chemical could be the reason for overall rates of lower sperm counts, faster onset of puberty, and increased prostate cancer in humans.
Over 150 scientific journals have shown the dangers of small amounts of BPA in lab animals, which is sufficient to show their potential for harm in babies. The Work Group for Safe Markets, a coalition of public health and environmental NGO's, found that 95% of bottles on the market currently contain BPA. All of the brands they tested, Avent, Evenflo, Dr. Brown's and Disney/First Years, leached between 4.7 - 8.3 parts per billion of BPA and were purchased from major stores across the country.
Posted by Penguin Group USA on Wed, 04/30/2008 - 9:33am.in
Harlan Coben's Hold Tight Debuts at #1 on The New York Times Bestseller List
Dutton veteran Harlan Coben's newest thriller, Hold Tight, has debuted at #1 on The New York Times hardcover fiction bestseller list for the week of May 4th, marking Coben's first New York Times #1 bestseller. And in addition to the New York Times list, the book also has the #1 position on Publishers Weekly's hardcover fiction list for the week of April 28th, as well as The Wall Street Journal's April 25th hardcover fiction list.
Hold Tight has received rave reviews, and Coben continues to get great media coverage for his opinions on parental use of spyware, including appearances on CBS' "The Early Show," CNN's "Glenn Beck," and in the pages of the New York Times. The book was also featured in the "Book Buzz" column of USA Today and a review of Hold Tight is expected to run in the upcoming edition of People magazine, on-stands April 25th.
Harlan has been greeted by swarms of fans as he tours around the country to promote the book. 300 people attended his first bookstore event at Bookends in New Jersey on April 13th, and another 200 turned out for his latest event at Barnes & Noble in Palm Beach Gardens last night. He also had a book party at The Stockyard in Boston, where over 100 people came to celebrate Hold Tight's publication.
Last weekend, Coben participated in a panel conversation at The Los Angeles Times Book Festival, and will be back in New York this week.
Posted by Penguin Group USA on Tue, 04/29/2008 - 2:54pm.in
Take Action: Ask your U.S. Representative to stand up for the protection of health and the environment by joining with his/her colleagues in the U.S. Congress through a letter to stop a pro-pesticide amendment in the Farm Bill, which is still under consideration in a House-Senate Agriculture conference committee.
Your Member of Congress received a "Dear Colleague" letter from Representatives Rush Holt (D-NJ) and Donald Payne (D-NJ) and the letter s/he is being asked to sign will go to the Farm Bill conferees. To sign on, tell your Member of Congress to email Rep. Holt's aide Michele Mulder michelle.mulder@mail.house.gov or call her at (609) 750-9365.
The provision, and other substitute language now floating around, stops the U.S. Department of Agriculture from curtailing hazardous pesticide use through its conservation programs, either by targeting specific contaminants that are poisoning water or hurting wildlife, or facilitating a transition to organic practices.
Parenting used to be simpler. Sure, there have always been emotional struggles and family crises, but the day-to-day logistics of life were quite clear. Here is your layette, here is a crib, babies are breastfed or fed with this bottle with this milk. The choices were simple and unambiguous.
Today, an enormous amount of time (that could be spent actually parenting), is spent wandering the baby product aisles of superstores trying to decide which of the 200 types of bottles available is the best one for your baby. Or which diaper or which pacifier or which bouncy seat or which car seat and on and on and on.
This enormously time consuming task has only become more difficult with the growing awareness that many of the chemicals used as building blocks for these modern conveniences might not be safe for growing babies. Now we have to consider not only whether our baby will latch on to the bottle we selected, but also whether this bottle will leach suspect chemicals into the milk?
And the scientific discourse in the media is of minimal help at all, but most often adding to your confusion and fear. One article says avoid this chemical at all costs and the next one says that the science has been blown out of proportion, that the exposures are so small we don't need to worry. Who do you believe? And if you decide to read the studies yourself, how do you decipher and translate them? It shouldn't take a rocket scientist to raise a child.
Posted by Penguin Group USA on Mon, 04/28/2008 - 9:26am.in
Leading medical experts and scientists team up with celebrity activists to help parents detoxify and green their households.
Nothing makes one more keenly aware of health risks lurking in the everyday world than becoming a parent. Most know the importance of using cabinet locks and child gates, but research is showing many more ways we need to be childproofing our homes. Tens of millions of American children now face chronic diseases and illnesses including cancer, autism, asthma, birth defects, ADD/ADHD, allergies, learning and developmental disabilities, as well as a host of lesser but disruptive ailments. And the growing research points to much of the increases on unseen threats wrought by exposure to chemicals in everyday products like cleaning supplies, beauty care and cosmetics, home furnishings, plastics, some foods and toys as contributing to these ailments. With that in mind, the non-profit organization Healthy Child Healthy World offers parents a definitive guide to creating a healthy, nontoxic, and environmentally sound home.
Filled with easy steps and simple solutions to improve family living without wreaking havoc on schedules or budgets, this book includes inspiring ideas for safe, eco-friendly cleaning methods, choosing healthier food, pet and garden care, nursery and home building materials, plus extensive tips for energy saving and family fun. With contributions from environmental science and public-health experts such as Dr. Phil Landrigan, Dr. Harvey Karp and Dr. Alan Greene, as well as many celebrity supporters (including Gwyneth Paltrow, Brooke Shields, Tobey Maguire, Sheryl Crow, Vanessa Williams, and Tom Hanks), Healthy Child Healthy World is the essential guidebook for parents wanting to go green.
Posted by Penguin Group USA on Fri, 04/25/2008 - 1:54pm.in
"Where do you get your ideas?" There's a question many writers dread. Not because they order them wholesale from a warehouse in Schenectady, as a famous SF writer once quipped, but because ideas aren't the hard part. Not really. Ideas are like breakfast cereal; there're more than I can possibly consume in a lifetime, but the real trick is finding the ones that don't go soggy and getting my procrastinating backside into a chair and my fingers on the keyboard often enough and long enough to turn them into a story-meal worth serving up.
I have eight linear feet of spiral-bound notebooks full of ideas from my high school days alone. Most of them seem to be the soggy-going kind, unfortunately--emo young wizards in alternate dimensions, Romances featuring fiery half-Irish Californios, dead detectives reincarnated as Afghan hounds... But there are sometimes bits of delicious, crunchy idea buried in the self-absorbed sog. So I keep the notebooks around, carefully stacked in a waterproof box. I don't use them very often, however.
Usually my ideas come from something I read, or heard--or misread or misheard--or some vagrant thought that broke free of its mental branch and came bouncing in on my conscious mind like a California avocado falling on an unsuspecting Mercedes. Which was the case with Bad Guy of the Month. This is what happened and it's typical of the way my avocado bounces--erm... that is, the way my mind stirs up ideas.
Posted by Penguin Group USA on Fri, 04/25/2008 - 9:21am.in
Jim Butcher once said that he modeled Harry Dresden on the hardboiled detectives of Mystery's Golden Age--guys who had two common traits: they got the snot beaten out of them regularly; and they knew how to cut up with the quips--to "lip off" as Mr. Butcher put it. I know who those guys are--guys like Sam Spade and Nick Charles and Philip Marlowe. I like those guys too, but I have to admit that one of my favorite detectives is not a tough guy who gets knocked around and bounces back or is quick with a smart-mouthed comment. He's the invisible man, the transparent lens through whose eyes the story and its setting is shown to the reader, but who is not, in fact, a motivator of the events. He's Ross MacDonald's Lew Archer, a man for whom detection is neither an exercise of ego, nor an unpleasant delivery from Circumstances R Us. It's just a job.
Even though a collection of Lew Archer short stories has been released recently, Lew doesn't get much play these days. He's the pure Mystery fiend's detective, as far removed from the quirky, fast-talking, idiosyncratic anti-hero of Hammett and Chandler as glass is from grits. He's not flashy, he's not charming, he's deceptively plain and quiet--an observer whose life is not meant for display. He's the detective Harper Blaine would most like to emulate and whom she simply cannot. But why not?
Posted by Penguin Group USA on Thu, 04/24/2008 - 10:38am.in
There is a saying that if it walks like a duck and it quacks like a duck, it must be a duck. Which is very embarassing if you're the parent of a small child with a plastic duck bill squeaker. If the child in question were a book, he'd be relegated to the "duck" shelves in short order and nothing his mother could say would get him moved back to homo sapiens.
Which is why half the bookstores I've walked into shelve Urban Fantasies in Horror. This really surprised--and I admit--offended me at first. I don't write horror! 'Deed I don't. (See Kat; see Kat get huffy and parochial.) It's not that I think horror is beneath me, but that I think of it as "that other stuff." Then I stopped to wonder "what is horror all about?" and could I be totally wrong about it?
So I started asking and thinking. Why was I considered a horror writer by some people? Was it the vampires, the ghosts, the death and dismemeberment? Well, in some cases, yes. To some folks, the presence of a vampire is all it takes to slot a book neatly into horror. That's kind of sad for some of the vampires, the St. Germaines and Henry Fitzroys who are basically nice guys. But it's not just vampires that will put a book into the horror department.
Posted by Penguin Group USA on Wed, 04/23/2008 - 9:48am.in
Recent comments
2 days 2 hours ago
1 week 5 hours ago
1 week 6 days ago
2 weeks 2 days ago
3 weeks 1 day ago
3 weeks 2 days ago
3 weeks 6 days ago
4 weeks 4 days ago
5 weeks 18 hours ago
5 weeks 3 days ago