“How to Be Well sets out to capture the depth and breadth of the wellness invasion—its fads, its legitimate practices, and its so-called cures. Larocca details the impressive variety of forms wellness can take: ingesting supposedly magical super-ingredients (ashwagandha, matcha, hyperlocal honey), chasing spiritual highs from fitness classes (SoulCycle, Peloton) . . . . Larocca does a good job of both explaining the wellness industry and ferreting out its scammier corners—the way that, for example, a variety of cleanses, clean-eatingprograms, and fasts are almost indecipherable from disordered eating.”
—The Atlantic
“Ms.Larocca, in a series of mostly funny but occasionally scathing chapters, describes how the wellness industry developed, what it has become, its occasionally sensible ideas and its many . . . . Ms. Larocca, a longtime fashion journalist, is at her best when lampooning the wellness industry’s excesses.”
—Wall Street Journal
"Larocca parses fads and trends, clean beauty and athleisure wear, the gospel of SoulCycle and the world according to Goop. She weighs the advantages and disadvantages of micro-dosing and biohacking. She too goes to Italy, where she attends a Global Wellness Summit featuring a spandex and sneaker fashion show and a presentation on ending preventable chronic disease the world over. . . . When Larocca goes deep, as she does on self-care, body confidence and sex positivity, she’s at her best — authoritative and witty, personal without being chummy . . . . And finally, refreshingly, she’s honest about the money at stake for the wellness-industrial complex.”
—The New York Times
“In her new book, How to Be Well, Amy Larocca dismantles the trillion-dollar industry that has made health feel both aspirational and unattainable. With clarity and precision, Larocca examines how wellness became less a matter of care and more a marker of status—sold to women as both cure and obligation . . . . Larocca examines the wellness industry through a mix of reporting, historical analysis, and personal experimentation . . . .She is especially attuned to the contradictions: that functional medicine can offer insight and promote pseudoscience; that self-care was once a radical act of resistance for women and is now a marketing slogan for bubble baths.”
—Harper’s Bazaar
“Writer Amy Larocca asks what's really behind all the promises of this industry in her new book, How To Be Well. In it, she dives into detoxes, colonics, infrared wraps, sweat lodges, wellness apps and supplements to figure out what is real and what's really just good marketing. What she uncovers isn't just a collection of trends but a vast and revealing system shaped by our beliefs about health, status, gender and worth. She's asking, who does this culture of wellness really serve? Who does it leave behind? And why, even when we see through the sales pitch, we still buy in.”
—Fresh Air, NPR
“How to be Well covers everything like catnip to me: juice cleanses, dubious diet advice, capitalism and goes deep on the ritualistic and religious aspect-devotion!— that comes with the buying and selling of "self-care" wanted to talk to her about where we are with wellness, a subject I clearly need to keep processing. Larocca understands both how zany and how insidious this world is that reads as both a satire and an exposé, but never, crucially, made me feel like I was to blame for seeking out these things and wanting to believe.”
—Marisa Meltzer, Substack
“Journalist Amy Larocca has spent seven years making sense of it all, and her book, How to Be Well, is out today. Despite its skeptical subtitle, Larocca understands that “wellness culture is too big for us to be either completely for or against it.”
—The Meteor
★ “A sharply pointed look at the vast wellness industry and ‘the burden of being healthy and attractive’ it places on consumers. ‘Medicine is increasingly a retail prospect.’ Health journalist Larocca realizes as much when visiting a New York doctor whose clinic now ‘looks like somewhere you’d go with a group of girlfriends for brunch.’ Underscore girlfriends, for Larocca focuses on the health and wellness experiences of women—not just ‘today’s ideal woman…hopped up on her plant-based diet and elaborate adaptogen regimen,’ but also the harried workaday woman who aspires to feeling better psychically and physically. It’s a $5.6 trillion industry, Larocca notes, and a vast portion of the till comes from catering to the idea that everyone can become that ideal woman. Some of that desired ‘wellness’ is attended to by the medical industry, which is increasingly bespoke for those who can afford it: Larocca depicts one members-only clinic with a mere five-minute waiting period, 18 times less than the average ER; such concierge medicine speaks to, in one of her nice, bemused turns of phrase, ‘something else, something more, some sort of extra health.’ Some of that wellness is also the province of specialty groceries. Does anyone remember a time before kale? As it turns out, it’s only been a dozen years or so since kale became groovy. On the matter of grooviness, Larocca is excellent on the New Age aspect of the wellness business, with its mantras and microbiome-supporting organic coffee and mindfulness, which, a longtime practitioner laments, ‘is usually being refashioned into a banal, therapeutic, self-help technique.’ And of course, much of that wellness centers on pharmaceuticals, on prescription diet drugs along with CBD, microdosing, ayahuasca, and all the rest. Larocca takes on the wellness biz with a healthy dose of skepticism, and the result is both eye-opening and good fun.”
—Kirkus (starred review)
★ Larocca (coauthor of New York Look Book) has done it all—and lived to save wellness-focused women everywhere money, time, and sanity by sharing her story alongside science-backed and well-documented alternatives to the pipeline of cleanses, detoxes, magic pills, retreats, and procedures that ultimately fail them. Divided into chapters centered on promises of magical cures, glow-getting beauty secrets, spiritual and soul-seeking practices, and cleanses, the book explores how wellness is an ideal against which women measure themselves, which in turn becomes a solipsistic process (i.e., wellness for its own sake). Larocca delves deep into Gwyneth Paltrow’s Goop empire and how it has trickled down into Walmart’s wellness days and Dunkin’ Donuts’ avocado toast—meaning that aspirational bodies and the price tags they come with are everywhere and indicate that, as this book demonstrates, there’s always a better version of you for sale.... At once an exposé of beauty and wellness trends, a critique of patriarchal culture, and a guide for individuals seeking real wellness not by purchasing things but by developing inner resources and making sustainable choices, this is the detox many people need from, well, detoxes and their often-detrimental effects.
—Library Journal (starred review)
★ "The present-day vogue for wellness is merely the latest attempt to convince women to buy products to correct for imagined deficiencies, according to this trenchant debut critique. Fashion reporter Larocca suggests that beauty product manufacturers responded to the rise of body positivity in the 2000s by promoting the concept of “glow,” rather than thinness, as the central marker of beauty, creating the illusion of inclusivity while insisting that looking good requires topical ointments and body brushes. Surveying the dubious science behind many wellness practices, she recounts getting a colonic (an enema “on steroids”) from a doctor who claimed that foods with opposite ionic charges “pile up... like sludge” inside the body without clinical intervention. Larocca also covers the more harmful aspects of the wellness space, positing that such trends as intermittent fasting and elimination diets promote disordered eating by implicitly equating skinniness with health. The nuanced analysis notes that while wellness culture’s appeal stems in part from legitimate concerns about the pharmaceutical industry’s insidious influence on mainstream medicine, the supplements hawked by alternative medicine practitioners are usually subject to the same corrupting profit motives. Penetrating and thought-provoking, this will cause readers to think twice before reaching for the latest purported cure-all.
—Publishers Weekly (starred review)
“What does it mean to be a “well” woman? And how has wellness become such a mammoth industry, with an alarming amount of space for the kooks and the quacks? Fashion journalist Larocca surveys the vast array of products and treatments traditional and new, reliable and questionable. She notes the assumption that the well woman is slender, though not all slimness is created equal. Weight-loss drugs like Ozempic and Wegovy offer a “chemical thinness” that lacks “glow” and “morality,” Larocca observes. As for wellness fashion, there's Lululemon, founded in 1998 by a Canadian American Ayn Rand fanatic who took up yoga because of back pain. This brand popularized high-end trendy athleisure clothes favored by the stylish well woman who does juice cleanses and avoids gluten (only one percent of the U.S. population actually has a gluten allergy). Larocca offers interesting portraits of famous people like Goop founder Gwyneth Paltrow (a wellness “she-god”) and regular people like herself, admitting the “embarrassing truth” that her socioeconomic status is most relevant to her health. Readers will find lots of informative and entertaining food (or juice) for thought.”
— Booklist
“A magical synthesis of crackerjack reporting, incisive cultural commentary, and, most importantly, elegant, self-reflective memoir, How to Be Well perfectly captures the defining ethos of our day. I've been a fan of Amy Larocca for two decades and this book, to me, felt like a gift: An opportunity to spend a few days inside her head, as she works out the manifold contradictions and confusions at the heart of contemporary womanhood.”
—Joanna Rakoff, author of My Salinger Year
“Amy Larocca brings her buoyant wit, cultural fluency, and indispensable skepticism to this rollicking exploration of our desperation for wellness, our devotion to CBD, self-care, and
Soul Cycle, deftly separating the gobbledygook from the truly transformative.”
—Ariel Levy, author of The Rules Do Not Apply