Eating fresh fruits and vegetables can boost your energy level, supercharge your immune system and maximise your body's healing power. Convenient and inexpensive, juicing allows you to obtain the most concentrated form of nutrition available from whole foods. This A-Z guide shows you how to use nature's bounty in the prevention and treatment of our most common health disorders. It gives complete nutritional programmes for over 75 health problems, telling you which fruits and vegetables have been shown to be effective in combating specific illnesses and why. Along with hundreds of delicious recipes, this book provides dietary guidelines and diet plans to follow in conjunction with your juicing regimen.
Maureen Keane Livres



Provides you with an overview on how cancer affects the body, as well as personalized meal plans for coping with the side effects of chemical, surgical, and radiation treatments. This title includes the research on angiogenesis and antioxidants and using low-carbohydrate/high-protein diets during cancer treatment.
Mrs S.C.Hall, a Literary Biography
- 260pages
- 10 heures de lecture
In 1829 Mrs S.C.Hall, an Irishwoman living in England, published a book of sketches set mainly in her native Wexford. Sketches of Irish Life and Character was an immediate success both with literary critics and the general public. A second series of Sketches appeared in 1831 and established Mrs Hall's reputation in England as an interpreter of Irish character. Her later works on Ireland – Lights and Shadows of Irish Life (1838), Stories of the Irish Peasantry (1840) and The Whiteboy (1845) – reinforced this view, and were very popular with her English and Scottish readers. She collaborated with her husband, the journalist Samuel Carter Hall, in the writing of a three-volume guide to Ireland, Halls' Ireland, its Scenery, Character, etc. (1841-43), and this too was accepted as an informed description of Irish life and character. In fact, Mrs Hall wrote as an observer imbued with colonial attitudes who believed in the superiority of everything English. Out of a genuine love for Ireland, however, she wished to make the country better known and understood in England, and she hoped through her writings to cure the Irish people of their faults. What makes her work interesting is the fact that it displays a tolerance and a lack of bigotry that was unusual for its time, and that she is openly critical (especially in her novel The Whiteboy) of government mismanagement and misrule.