There are some good ideas in this book, but I wouldn't recommend it to everyone. Based on the reviews it seems evident that the "Binge Code" method is generally helpful to people, and while I found the sections in the first half of the book detailing "quick fix" methods to avoid binges and the 7 traps we fall into that lead to binge eating, the latter half of the book really lets it down.
The first section, "ZEN10 your binge urges" is not particularly substantial but is nevertheless helpful, detailing numerous methods one can employ in a pinch when trying to suppress binge urges. There's not much to say about this section other than that - it's a helpful reference guide for binge band-aids.
The second section has a lot more meat to it, introducing the reasons behind why people binge, what triggers binges, human relationships with food and other such ideas. Seven different "traps" are exemplified, each with its own rationale and details on how to how to escape the trap (referred to as "keys" by the author). This is where the book shines, as it offers an easily digestible and rational approach to reducing binge urges in the long term, which is exactly what the book is for.
Starting from the "BioBalancing" chapter the grammar takes a tumble, and the citations and acute observations common throughout the first half of the book seem to peel away. The author makes sure to include a trademark™ after near every mention of "BioBalancing" (though a cursory Google search seems to suggest this particular phrase is used for all sorts of applications and isn't generally related to the book or author) to the point it really feels as though we are punters to the author's sales pitch. The "BioBalancing" method itself appears to be a composite mixture of common sense and complete hocum that is packaged as a product being marketed to the reader, which does a good job of undermining the ideas laid out in the first two sections of the book.
The author has a tendency to speak with an absolute tone, there's a lot of "this method WILL help" and "eat 3 meals a day or you WILL binge" kind of language which, when coupled with other somewhat controversial ideas in the book (fasting and diets are ultimately not effective; refined and processed carbs like pasta are as nutritionally valuable as wholegrain carbs like oats) makes the general penmanship feel a little disingenuous.
I think it probably depends on what you're looking to get out of this book. Maybe I'm not the target audience, as I'm a young man of a healthy weight looking for a way to control my binge eating to save money more than anything, though I found I could relate to most of the "traps" regardless. It has helped me to better understand my relationship with food, and has changed the way I approach the pantry and the fridge, but I just can't buy into the whole proper noun-ness of it all ("Binge Code", "Zen10", "BioBalancing™").