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More, Please: On Food, Fat, Bingeing, Longing, and the Lust for "Enough"

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An unflinching and deeply reported look at the realities of binge-eating disorder from a rising culture commentator and writer for Vogue. Millions of us use restrictive diets, intermittent fasting, IV therapies, and Ozempic abuse to shrink until we are sample-size acceptable. But for the 30 million Americans who live with eating disorders, it isn’t just about less. More, Please is a chronicle of a lifelong fixation with food—its power to soothe, to comfort, to offer a fleeting escape from the outside world—as well as an examination of the ways in which compulsory thinness, diet culture, and the seductive promise of “wellness” have resulted in warping countless Americans’ relationship with healthy eating. Melding memoir, reportage, and in-depth interviews with some of the most prominent and knowledgeable commentators currently writing about food, fatness, and disordered eating—Jennifer Weiner, Marisa Meltzer, Virgie Tovar, Leslie Jamison, and others—Emma Specter explores binge-eating disorder as both a personal problem and a societal one. In More, Please , she provides a context, a history, and a language for what it means to always want more than you’ll allow yourself to have.  

1 pages, Audio CD

First published July 9, 2024

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Emma Specter

4 books8 followers

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5 stars
117 (15%)
4 stars
254 (32%)
3 stars
300 (38%)
2 stars
86 (11%)
1 star
18 (2%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 131 reviews
Profile Image for Thomas.
1,876 reviews12.1k followers
August 23, 2024
I really liked this memoir about binge eating disorder and anti-fat bias in society overall. Emma Specter does a great job of writing about her struggles with binge eating in a way that feels real and raw without glorifying the disorder. My sense is that many eating disorder memoirs focus on more of the restrictive/anorexic side of disordered eating, so it’s refreshing – though of course sad and harrowing – to read about Specter’s journey. At the same time, I appreciated and resonated with her hard-won path toward self-acceptance and coming to cherish her body. From following and learning from fat influencers to figuring out what types of movement make her feel good about herself, Specter includes a lot of wisdom in these pages. She acknowledges the intersections of anti-fat bias and anti-Black racism, as well as other forms of oppression too.

On a writing level I don’t think this was the perfect memoir. Sometimes the blend of memoir and interviewing other people didn’t always read spectacularly, and Specter does use a fair amount of long sentences (something I think I can tend towards too, so…) Still, as someone who’s had an eating disorder in the past and is intentional about my recovery and relationship with food every day, it’s nice to read about another person’s healing journey, amidst all the societal anti-fat bs.
Profile Image for Teres.
228 reviews671 followers
October 26, 2024
Alert the media. This is a first for me. 🎉

I have actually thrown in the towel on this one and can admit, it's just not for me. Reads more like a term paper, less like a memoir.

DNF... and it feels gooooood! 🙌🏻
Profile Image for Vanessa M..
256 reviews24 followers
August 6, 2024
I appreciated Specter’s bravery and honesty in sharing her journey with binge eating disorder, body acceptance, and queerness. In More Please, Specter gives the reader a detailed report of her past and current struggles with her own personal acceptance of who she really is—manifested mostly in the realm of her physicality. For her, the diet culture she felt herself surrounded in played a huge part in her barrier to self-acceptance and obsession with thinking about her body. Gaining weight alongside coming out helped her to come to terms with acceptance.

I related strongly to Emma as she described liking herself after gaining and maintaining a higher weight. I don’t advocate for people to do this or to get on the body positivity/fat acceptance train so to speak. However, it was nice to “meet” someone who experienced the same thing I did.
Profile Image for Erin.
3,097 reviews383 followers
July 11, 2024
ARC for review. Published July 9, 2024.

A loose mix of memoir, interviews with other and general reporting, this book examines one woman’s experience with an eating disorder and a fixation on food that has existed much of her life, and then also looks at weight and disordered eating as a societal issue.

The book is an interesting perspective as the author has spent years working in the fashion industry (most recently for Vogue.). After years of struggle she ultimately gave up her battle to be stick thin and allowed herself to gain weight. It is so disheartening to see how much she still struggles, though, It is somewhat surprising that she has been successful in fashion. She references many books which would be helpful to those seeking to make a deeper, more scholarly dive into the subject.
Profile Image for kimberly.
663 reviews522 followers
July 10, 2024
In More, Please Specter unflinchingly lays bare her relationship with food and her body, focusing specifically on self-harm in the form of binge-eating. Specter explores the origin and the development of her eating disorder, her feelings regarding living with a life-long diagnosis, societal expectations on peoples’ bodies, and how eating disorders are not just a personal problem. Blending memoir with investigative journalism, More, Please is a must-read that is piercing, witty, and insightful.
Profile Image for Pat Herndon.
506 reviews12 followers
September 6, 2024
So much to say! But, I’ll keep it brief. It took me a month to read this 190 page book. It was about a subject that deeply interests me. It was recommended by Frank Bruni, my favorite New York Times writer. However, many things about this book put me off. The author composes very rambling sentences. She is writing about her own recent life experience as though three years past is the same as three decades past. As a reader much older than is the author, this point of view was irritating. I kept thinking sweetie, you really have not lived enough to have a clear perspective on your own life.
I guess overall as a mature woman who has struggled with food, appetite and body image my whole life I found her claims of self-acceptance to be quaint. She’s got a whole life to get through. I sure can’t say, don’t read this book. Read it. Enjoy learning about another human’s experiences, but don’t expect this to be any sort of guidepost for ways to conquer issues related to eating.
Profile Image for CatReader.
1,054 reviews193 followers
October 17, 2024
Writer Emma Specter (b. 1993) has struggled with her relationship with food from her adolescence to the present time, her early 30s. During her 20s and into today, she struggles with binge eating disorder (BED). More, Please is largely a memoir, recounting Specter's own journey with food and body image thus far, her stop-and-start attempts at losing weight, seeking support, and accepting her now-larger body size, reflections on influential books she's read on addiction and disordered eating, and some interviews with other people who have similar struggles. I think it's a book she needed to write for her own mental health and well-being, and may be a help to others who have similar struggles.

I personally had very mixed feelings on this book. It's clear that Specter is still in the throes of BED as she writes this . She's also 30-31 years old right now - so young. It would be interesting to see her revisit this topic once she's somewhat older.

Further reading: weight, nutrition, eating disorders, and body image
Empty by Susan Burton
Ultra-Processed People: The Science Behind Food That Isn't Food by Chris van Tulleken, MD
In Defense of Food: An Eater's Manifesto by Michael Pollan
Salt Sugar Fat: How the Food Giants Hooked Us by Michael Moss
Magic Pill: The Extraordinary Benefits and Disturbing Risks of the New Weight-Loss Drugs by Johann Hari
The Elephant in the Room: One Fat Man's Quest to Get Smaller in a Growing America by Tommy Tomlinson

My statistics:
Book 243 for 2024
Book 1846 cumulatively
Profile Image for Ruth.
Author 7 books397 followers
June 14, 2024
I’m so grateful for this wise, hilarious, and deeply thoughtful memoir in essays. Emma Specter is a treasure!
Profile Image for Mrs. Read.
727 reviews23 followers
August 29, 2024
Although as a rule I avoid books about a subject with which I have personal experience, Emma Specter’s More, Please is one of many dealing with something I do know/care about: weight loss - not diet books, but those describing someone’s struggle to get thin[ner]. Like most American women of my era I have constantly wanted to lose weight** and am attracted to accounts by others who have dealt with that same desire. It won’t be much of a spoiler to reveal that the writer concludes that she has a disease (binge eating disorder) which makes its victim fat, and that with the help of many sessions with nutritionists, therapists, and psychologists, she’s found that she’s happier living with her illness than devoting her life to fighting it. Sadly, although she states explicitly that “This is part of the fundamental irony of eating disorders, or maybe just of existing in a body; what everyone else sees on the outside bears little to no resemblance to what you feel yourself to be on the inside” the rest of the book is focused on how she looks on the outside. That said, it is well-written* and will likely appeal to many veterans of the battle.

*“diet ice cream that tastes like Splenda-sweetened snow”
“a woman whose insistence on reexplaining portion sizes in all of our sessions made me feel (a) stupid and (b) insane"

**insofar as it’s relevant, speaking objectively I have never been fat
Profile Image for Maya Kosoff.
18 reviews11 followers
July 9, 2024
Incisive, thoughtful and well-reported memoir about what it’s like to live in a body and all the baggage that comes along with it. Give Emma her flowers!
Profile Image for Olivia Mullenax.
66 reviews
August 2, 2024
A wonderful book! Expertly weaves in personal anecdotes with insightful, frank and intersectional theses. This really forced me to look at myself in a different way and to ask difficult questions. Who will I be without self hatred? When will loving myself stop feeling like such a task?

Some quotes that really stood out to me:


“I think we have to admit our national obsession with being small isn’t just some tragic holdover from the aughts; it’s affirmation of white supremacist, cis-heteropatriarchal notions about physical appearance and intrinsic worth”(40)

“Throughout my own adolescence fat was the third rail; it was the thing I was taught to pity and disdain, the one thing I knew I couldn’t be if I wanted to be loved” (40)

“There is so much that fatphobia stands ready and waiting to take from us if we don’t receive the support we need to fight back against it; I still grieve the things I lost to its insidious presence in my life, even as I refuse to give up even more” (142)

“How are we supposed to demand more from our friends, from our partners, from our bosses, from ourselves, when the world continually reminds us our bodies are obstacles, not vehicles?” (153)

“Knowing something and feeling it are two different things” (161)

“There is nothing whatsoever about my fat body or yours that precludes the possibility of genuine joy brought about through whatever form or movement or interaction with the outside word you love most”(166)

Thank you, Emma
Profile Image for Taylor.
2 reviews
July 20, 2024
Damn, I love good (& essential) writing
Profile Image for Steven Nolan.
701 reviews7 followers
September 30, 2024
I recognize it’s Scrooge vibes to give a negative review with a book about this topic. All I can say is that it reads like Hannah Horvath wrote a memoir about binge eating.
78 reviews1 follower
August 19, 2024
In this “hybrid memoir-in-interviews,” Vogue culture writer Emma Specter blends her own struggles with binge eating and body image with the voices of prominent body-positive writers, including Carmen Maria Machado and Roxane Gay, to show how representation can be a healing agent. “The fat influencers and artists and writers and actors and musicians I sought out on social media when I first began to exceed the sizes that most stores kept in stock (or even manufactured) provided the road map that pointed me toward my current identity as a fat, mostly happy, out-and-proud dyke and decidedly fat-positive human being,” she writes. The author takes readers through relatable phases of her life in chapters titled “Watch,” about how so many girls learn from media presentations what the “ideal body” looks like; “Gorge,” detailing the struggles of living with binge-eating disorder; “Move,” about finding joy through exercise of all kinds, not just the calorie-burning forms. Specter dives deep into her personal experience, but she never loses track of the far-reaching, societal factors that contribute to and arise out of diet culture and the shaming of fat bodies. “At a certain point,” she writes, “when we’re still selling diet plans to kids and rewarding grown women for fitting into sample sizes, I think we have to admit that our national obsession with being small isn’t just some tragic holdover from the aughts; it’s affirmation of white supremacist, cis-heteropatriarchal notions about physical appearance and intrinsic worth.” Though the author covers a lifetime of body image issues, her emphasis on the difficulty of the pandemic years for disordered eating is a fresh, timely take, which readers of all sizes can appreciate.
An inspiring personal account of living with an eating disorder and finding joy in a fat body.
Profile Image for Christie.
23 reviews
January 14, 2025
This book was really hard for me to get through, not because of the subject matter but I think in part because of the writing style. Lots and lots of really long sentences, filled with parentheses, semicolons, and hyphens to add more info. Some paragraphs were just one sentence. I truly appreciated and respected the author’s experiences and perspectives, but this was a tough slog to finish.
Profile Image for Amy Baumgarten.
76 reviews2 followers
August 25, 2025
realistically it’s probably 3 stars but i am very inspired by someone sharing openly about the most shameful parts of their internal struggles. reading this made me feel like someday i could do the same!!! but that is extremely courageous so we’ll see. slightly repetitive in nature, but so is dealing with an ED so i guess thats fair lol. lots of references to other books/authors/research if you’re interested in diving further into the topic, obviously a huge tw if reading about ED/food/body image is triggering for you
Profile Image for fer pacheco.
281 reviews13 followers
January 10, 2025
me gusto como entreteje ensayo con autobiografía con citas de libros que no conozco, que me gustan y autoras diversas, diseca bien algunas de las cosas que cruzan al cuerpo, la percepción de este cómo normal, gordo, del ejercicio, género, sexualidad y como se relacionan
Profile Image for Liana.
221 reviews32 followers
August 5, 2024
This was a well written, thoughtful book that dives deep into eating disorders, weight loss and gain, self-confidence, isolation, and coming into one's queer identity. The reality of it all -- moving goal posts, getting what you wanted making some things better but the disappointment of it not necessarily changing things you want changed. Specter deftly references just the right art, music, interviews, book quotes, articles to illustrate the right feeling and moment and I was with her the whole time.
Profile Image for kate✰.
289 reviews21 followers
August 8, 2024
tw: ed discussion ahead!

it's always tough to rate/review memoirs, because i can't possibly rate the validity of someone's life experience. in rating this as a book, though, i had some issues.

firstly, i found the structure to be a little bit lacking. we are given a chronological recounting of emma specter's entire life, arranged in themed chapters like "lose" and "move." i love the concept of the theming, but it often felt like it was working against the flow of time, which made it feel shoehorned in. the most vibrant pieces of the memoir to me (by far) were the passages about eating disorders & covid — an intersection that absolutely deserves more discussion. i almost wish the scope of this book had been more contained. i think a researched-memoir like this focusing specifically on specter's time in covid (and disordered eating trends during lockdown in general) would have been a hit.

it was really refreshing and affirming to read about someone else's experience with binge eating disorder. it sucks, and it's nice to see representation. it's especially nice to hear from someone who doesn't also experience bulimia. it feels like so often we only see media depictions that combine the two, but they are independent disorders with independent patterns.

the parallels specter draws between queer identity and disordered eating were really interesting, but ... by the second half of this book, specter's writing began to feel rather preach-y. it felt like they were holding my hand and telling me how to feel about myself, my body, and my journey — and their perspective didn't always align with mine, which made it tough to connect as a reader. i'm a steadfast believer in more discussions about disordered eating forever & always. and no two people's experiences will ever be identical. i just wish this had felt a little less like a self-help book and a little more like a personal memoir.
Profile Image for Kenzie.
242 reviews3 followers
August 19, 2024
Based on the description I thought this would be a glance into the world of EDs with like facts and studies, insights, etc. This is very much this woman's personal memoir. Had it not been a audiobook I would have DNFed. I feel bad about ever rating someone's personal experience so low but after rereading the summary, I think I'm being more than fair. This could have just been a livejournal entry. Lol
Profile Image for Laura.
554 reviews24 followers
October 2, 2024
This is 1/2 memoir 1/2 book reviews. It read like a B+ college paper.
Profile Image for Jamie.
604 reviews5 followers
October 6, 2025
When I’m sad, or bored, or lonely, or tired, or feeling nothing at all, though, these everyday snacks turn into my own personal bogeymen, representing my darkest impulses to stuff myself, gorge myself, hurt myself. Detangling the foods themselves from the ways in which I’ve used them to self- harm is a task that might take me the rest of my life to accomplish.

this read more as a reflection on binge eating and queerness, and while it was interesting it also wasn't what I had necessarily expected. Specter's exploration of BED, both her personal experiences and the narrative of how the disorder is painted in pop culture, resonated with my own life experience in uncomfortable ways.
Profile Image for Amanda.
143 reviews3 followers
June 14, 2025
I enjoyed this read a lot! She words things perfectly and I just love the way she describes the exact feelings and complexities of being a larger women in society. There’s so many moments where I agree and felt it and she worded it perfectly!

Opened my eyes to binging as an eating disorder and she takes me on a tale about her life as she fights and loves this disorder while navigating romance, friendship, work and mildly family.

It reads a lot like an edited diary but also catches herself by putting lots of parenthesis everywhere too. Anyways, I love this book and will be revisiting often!
Profile Image for ~ kay ~.
172 reviews28 followers
September 8, 2024
Loved this, very insightful, soul bearing and almost humorous at times. Lots of take aways for any and all backgrounds, even if you don’t specifically relate to the topic at hand you will for sure be met with something in here that surely resonates.
Absolutely recommend, was also introduced into a world of body advocacy in literature that has expanded my own horizons.
Profile Image for Moira Williamson.
264 reviews
July 13, 2024
Nice quick memoir on being fat and using food as a coping mechanism. As someone who also struggles with body image and eating, it’s nice to see how others personal journey is going, both good and bad. I wish it was just a touch more memoir than information, but it’s great nonetheless.
Profile Image for Taylor.
68 reviews
July 20, 2024
Smart, vulnerable, brave. I don't have binge-eating disorder but have had my own emotional eating and body image struggles, and I thought her story was affirming without being cloying
Profile Image for Abby.
39 reviews5 followers
February 2, 2025
Thanks Emma for your gift of honesty and insight. I left this memoir with my own resounding narrative that no healing is linear, and no healing takes place without enjoyment of the present - which is just what I needed to take from it at this time.
Profile Image for Taylor.
115 reviews2 followers
June 3, 2025
I’m so glad this book exists. So many parts of Specter’s story mirror my own experience which made this a validating, wonderful work to read (or listen to)!
Profile Image for Sam.
40 reviews1 follower
Read
October 22, 2024
DNF not what I thought this would be. I just felt like there wasn’t much flow and it was just diarrhea at the mouth with anecdotes.
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