Not a Diet Book: The Must-Have Fitness Book From the Worlds Favourite Personal Trainer by James Smith


Not a Diet Book: The Must-Have Fitness Book From the Worlds Favourite Personal Trainer
Title : Not a Diet Book: The Must-Have Fitness Book From the Worlds Favourite Personal Trainer
Author :
Rating :
ISBN : -
Language : English
Format Type : Kindle Edition
Number of Pages : 320
Publication : First published January 23, 2020

This is NOT a diet book


Not a Diet Book: The Must-Have Fitness Book From the Worlds Favourite Personal Trainer Reviews


  • Becky

    I don't remember exactly how or when I discovered James Smith, the World's Favo[u]rite Personal Trainer and "That Hashtag-Calorie-Fucking-Deficit Guy" (#CFD!), but I have been following him for a good while on the Social Media, and I freaking love him. He speaks my language, which, for the record, isn't ENTIRELY f-bombs, because my vocabulary is comprehensive and multifarious (and I obviously have access to Thesaurus.com) but it does comprise a goodish chunk of it. But mostly I mean that he's fluent in No Bullshit, which I appreciate. There's so much garbage out there, and it is entirely refreshing to have discovered someone who really just wants people to be educated and in control of their own lives and bodies.

    I joined his James Smith Academy (JSA) back in 2018, and one of the best things about it (besides Diren Kartal's fine self *drool*) is that it's NOT the kind of program you join and then can never leave if you want to continue your progress. I'm looking at you, Weight Watchers, et al. Let me elucidate. I did a free trial of WW several years ago, back when it was just WW Points. I lost weight, but absolutely LOATHED HATED AND DETESTED having to track the points - which meant looking up EACH FREAKING INGREDIENT, figuring out the points for them, and then adding them up for each meal, and then calculating my total for the day, and subtracting that from my allowance. Here's the thing about WW - they don't want you to know the actual nutritional value of foods, or that what they are essentially doing with their complicated hocus pocus is creating a calorie deficit you could do on your own. That's why their program changes every time the wind shifts. I googled "Weight Watchers Points" just now, and the suggested results included: Points, Points Plus, Freestyle, & SmartPoints. Question: Why does the points program calculation need to change so frequently if it's working? Answer: They want you as a member. And they make the program ever more "simple" by taking all of the education and information out of it so you must rely on them for it to work.

    Same with food prep programs like Jenny Craig. Yes, you'll lose weight. But you won't know how to do it WITHOUT THEM. And that's what they're counting on.

    James Smith isn't about that life. He wants you to join his program (or don't, you can learn a lot from him for free on social media), learn as much as you want or need, and then go on about your life without a recurring bill showing up on your credit card each and every month until you die. (Except maybe that gym membership charge. But only if you use it. :P)

    Anyway, so I followed him for a while, and then I joined his academy, and was rocking it, but I'm a lazy wagon-falling bitch and so this is my kickstart to get back on that freaking wagon and ride it into the sunset. When I found out that James was writing a book, I was all YES PLEASE and pre-ordered that beech. AND, it should be telling that it didn't sit on my TBR for a decade before I got around to reading it, either.

    A lot of the book was rehashing stuff that I was already familiar with, having followed him and suchlike, but that's to be expected. His social media and online presence will only reach so many people, and despite how much his following has grown in the last few years, a book, published and released into the wild, will reach a much vaster audience, and likely a good chunk of those readers will not know who he is or what he's about. There is a ton of good information in here, but it is true to its word that it is NOT a diet book. You will not come away from this book with a new fad eating plan that's guaranteed to burn the fat into lean muscle overnight without lifting a finger, just eat this one mystery food every day at 3:29PM and watch the fat melt/burn/evaporate/transfigure off like the magic it would be. You will come away from this book with a LOT more information, a much improved fitness industry Bullshit Detector, and a more positive outlook on your prospects for achieving and maintaining a lifestyle that works for you.

    Because that's what it's all about, right? Maintenance. Can you maintain that Low/No-Carb diet forever? Can you maintain that uber-restrictive clean eating plan? Or that juice fast/skinny coffee/coffee with butter/fat-blast lollipop/whatever diet? I sure the hell couldn't. I can't maintain even the CONCEPT of those kinds of insane restrictions long term. One of the first things that I learned from James via his videos was this: You don't need a diet. You HAVE a diet. You just need to make it work for you. And that's where the education that he provides comes in... to learn what your daily energy expenditure and calorie needs look like, and then work with those numbers to create a sensible, reasonable deficit that will result in losing fat.

    This book is not a diet book. It's more of an inspirational, educational, self-helpy kind of book with a lot of nutritional and fitness science thrown in for good measure. I LOVED how many times he said "What does the science say?" on a topic. That's the content I want. The science, the facts, the real. This is why I follow him and happily bought a book that rehashed so much of what I already knew, and why I highly recommend his program to all of the people. (Including my wagon-falling ass self, of course.)

  • Lee

    He describes himself as crass and a bit of a prick and I can’t help but agree. Some interesting stuff in the book, but a lot of info. he’s clearly taken from others (e.g. Matthew Walker’s “Why We Sleep”). I checked out his Insta profile and if I’d done this first I probably wouldn’t have bought this book. He’s too laddish for me, that kind of thing turns me right off. Mostly though all his hints and tips are not particularly new, and as I follow so many other fitness professionals on Insta and elsewhere, and read a lot about nutrition, sleep and what not, I didn’t learn as much as I’d hoped. However, I did appreciate the chapter on female hormones etc.; not all PTs would address this, especially male PTs.

  • Sarah

    What a load of rubbish! This guy thinks he is something he is not. I struggled to get through his vacuous egotistical ramblings. Nothing new here. All rehashed ideas. His views on relationships are ill thought out and potentially dangerous, encouraging ppl to leave relationships as you have to look after no1. No mention of being open, patient or longevity. There are so many holes in most of his laddish philosophies.
    I find him quite pretentious aswell looking down on ppl who stay stuck in jobs they 'don't absolutely love' you've just insulted most of people who work. Welcome to reality. Most ppl don't get £100 a month from daddy in our early 20's to buy 'sausage rolls and beer'. And drive around in Daddies range rover for our first selling job.
    I'm sure lots of young ladies will think he's brilliant and he'll conquer many bed posts because according to the the law of averages he reckons if I dislike him (which he wants) more WILL LIKE him...
    Who cares anyway!!!!

  • Leah

    The best book ever on the fitness industry, advice, diet, exercise!

    James Smith is "That Hashtag-Calorie-Fucking-Deficit Guy" (#CFD!) He covers a range of topics from diet, diet fads, training routines, supplements, sleep, when to eat, how to eat, motivation, and even women's menstrual cycles.

    What I loved most was James' attitude and how he speaks. He is very down to earth, real, no bullshit. He simplifies the complicated world of weight loss which I appreciate.

    He says if you miss one work out of if you have a "calorie dense meal (aka cheat meal - he doesn't like to use this phrase) then it's O.K. it's not going to be the end of the world, so you shouldn't hate yourself for doing it. Everything in moderation and if you do it once in a while then it's fine.

    What it all comes down to in losing weight, fat, getting healthier, lowering your BMI etc is just going on a calorie deficit diet. More calories out than in will make you lose weight, it's really that simple.

    All these diet fads are just some ways in consuming less calories overall, and whichever one you believe in will generally work because it's a placebo. Some others are better than others, for example Intermittent Fasting is a great way to lose fat because you're basically skipping breakfast and only consuming lunch and dinner, less calories, more weight loss.

  • Pietrino

    Really good Stuff.

  • Paulina

    I like him. And his no-bullshit approach.

    Being that I read a handful of the books James cites and whose lessons were paraphrased here (and often) some parts seem like collections of other peoples anecdotes. Which is not to say he didn’t facilitate a great re-telling, relatable, and at times motivational.

    Some parts were too simplistic. And you can’t crush everyone else’s anecdotes and then promote your own...unless it’s you writing your own book...which this situation falls under. Grain of salt and everyone can enjoy it.

    But honestly, I think this is me trying to be critical. Because I told myself I’d write more book reviews in 2021. Overall I enjoyed it and would recommend it to others. Especially those starting out on a new life/fitness journey. For those of you that aren’t, most of his lessons can be found on his Instagram.

  • Olivia Saman

    NOT A DIET BOOK
    .
    Written by: James Smith
    Narrated by: James Smith
    .
    Man I really dislike this book and this guy. What a load of rubbish I just listened to. It was like he was having an argument with someone the whole time.
    .
    First off he starts the book by telling you off. Like calm the F down dude I just bought your book don't have a go at me.
    .
    Then everything he talks about, it's like he is talking about how good he is and then has a come back for all the critics that are going to nay say about the thing he just talked about.
    .
    The title is correct, this is not a Diet Book. I learnt absolutely zero about how to do better and get fitter. There was one thing that he started to talk about, about how diets are more in our heads and we need to fix our mindsets... and I was like finally he is going to teach me something. Then that's was it. That's literally all he said.
    .
    I got sad mad listening to this book. Some of the stuff he was saying was utter rubbish. So frustrating.
    .
    Second book I've returned and got my credit back. If you want a book that is going to get you annoyed and if you want to learn nothing but hear about how good this guy thinks he is then this is the book for you. If not find something else. Grrrr.
    .
    For my Liv review
    🌱 1/5 content (I learnt that email is a good marketing tool)
    🎨🎨 2/5 for Narration... just coz he was the author.

  • Linda

    James Smith PT (follow him on Insta you won’t be sorry @jamessmithpt)

    A fantastic book for inspiration and motivation when it comes to fitness, food, females and fat loss. He is no nonsense and debunks so many untruths we’ve all been taught during our fitness and weight loss experiences. I think I’ll be rereading it often.

  • Sara Bader

    This book is so bad that there’s no way 4K people bought this on Amazon. There’s not a single new information, you can find everything he mentions in any random PT’s caption on Instagram. Also he’s just not funny

  • Stefania

    What an impressive book. I've been in the fitness world for some years now, and it took me years of trial and error, and a lot of research on my own time to learn about these concepts. I'm delighted James was able to explain these fundamental health concepts SO CLEARLY - from nutrition, to good habits (sleep, keep NEAT up, let go of toxic relationships that don't support your new lifestyle), to training, fat loss and muscle gain, and more. I particularly loved the chapters about Type I and Type II diabetes (even if you don't have it, someone in your life might have it or develop it if not addressed) and about female physiology and PCOS. Not enough women know how our hormones and menstrual cycle influence fat loss and muscle strength, which can lead to a lot of disappointment and frustration.
    I'm going to recommend this book to everyone - gym rats like me as well as everyone else. Preventing obesity and disease should be a social goal.

    (Bonus points if you read the book in James' accent haha.)

  • Ramona Tinga

    If you want to read one book, just one, about fitness and mostly fat loss, this book is for you. It gives you most of the basics and even gives you some important points from other non-fiction books like Matthew Walker’s Why We Sleep. Have you already read multiple books on this topic or do you have quite a bit of knowledge on the topic, then this book is not the best for you.

  • Anette

    Here's the thing with books about losing weight/getting in shape - there are as many opinions, methods and approaches, as people, who preach about them. Even James acknowledges this couple of times in his book - he mentions fitness influencers and how they rely on anecdotal evidence. He mentions bias, present in the work of many PTs. He obviously doesn't spend too much time on this matter because he is selling his way of influencing people.

    There are some fundamental truths, research and facts that you will hear time and time again, but at the end of the day, what works and what doesn't will depend on the individual applying the methods. And each of us changes - we go through different phases, different levels of motivation and different circumstances.

    What type of person will be happy to have found this book? I think it will be someone, who is discouraged from having tried to lose weight many times and has many explanations as to why their efforts had not panned out. The type of a person, who constantly compares themselves to others and feels like a failure, especially when scrolling through Instagram profiles of fitness influencers.

    I quite liked James' approach - it's straightforward, easy to implement, relies on teaching people to get back to basics and stop looking for miracle cures to being overweight. The language this book is written in is kind of "myth-busting" in style- there are jokes about how people follow fads, intermittent fasting craze, keto and similar. The author advises you to get moving, eat fewer calories, get enough sleep, supplement vitamin D, change your thinking from focusing on the goal to focusing on the journey. These are all smart pieces of advice and I feel that, at times when everyone has an opinion/trick/solution, every other fitness influences is not a trained PT but a person, who lost weight through trial and error, voices from the industry that reject unattainable body goals and talk about lifestyle changes, are important. He talks about changing your life and your mindset, sometimes letting go of wanting to reach the perfect streak and not focusing on the photos you see online. When the mindset is right, the consistency is maintained and results will come.

    This isn't new or innovative but I can see how James' personality and his philosophy would make for a convincing proposition for someone, who struggles to implement healthy habits. This book is an equivalent of an attentive friend, who sits you down and tells you that you need to get off your butt (mate) and stop being a knob.

    Will I follow his advice? I already do. Like I wrote, it's not revolutionary. The audiobook was fun to listen to :)

  • Luke Phillips

    From the first page, Not a Diet Book by James Smith bursts with pace, charisma, and for the most part, common sense. This book is about changing your life and lifestyle so that you make better choices when it comes to what makes you happy, especially in terms of fitness and food. For me, this is both the book's greatest strength and clearest weakness, as Smith often wanders into territory where he has no expertise, but plenty of opinion - and his strength of resolve, personality, and self-esteem means that there is no difference in the telling. Fact and opinion find themselves interchangeable and indistinguishable as a result.

    James Smith' no-nonsense approach to food and fitness is completely refreshing. Boiling it down to one principal - that of creating a calorie deficit, is the stand out message of this book. Nothing else really matters - as Smith himself points out, the method isn't really important. But trajectory and where you're headed is. Whether recommending apps, examining exercise that's right for you, or discussing diets and why they tend not to work - Smith maintains a neutral and knowledgeable source of excellent insight. The general principles laid down in the book will undoubtedly help anyone who reads it and follows the advice to feel happy and healthier.

    There are some principles though, that I think are more typical of a younger generation, and not quantified by James' expertise or level of life experience, and would be dangerous if taken to heart. For instance, despite stating he is no relationship guru, nor qualified career advisor, his advice of "if it's not f*ck yeah, it's a no," has dangerous connotations. Getting into shape and losing weight takes work and a healthy commitment to maintenance, and the same goes for relationships. And yes, spending time in a job you don't "absolutely love" is not ideal - but circumstances don't always allow for that. I obviously agree with Smith that changes are always possible, and you should certainly work towards them when you identify an area in your life that you're not happy with. But, there was a flippancy and disregard of reality in just a few areas of the book that made me wary. Sometimes, life is about taking small steps instead of big, drastic jumps just because something doesn't work for us straight away.

    However, for the most part, the book is motivational, positive, and gives the reader the tools to cut a very clear and decisive path towards a happier and healthier life based on where they want to be.

  • Sarah Wakeford

    Terrible. It’s all about me, me, me, me

  • Rebecca (Medusa's Rock Garden)

    This is a good book with a good amount of information which helps debunk a lot of myths that abound about health, fitness, and diet. I already knew most of it though, so it wasn't super new to me and all that I know was gained for free online, so while the book is a great way to get that info in a single place easily without need for researching it yourself - it is available for free and pretty easy to find with a little research. Still, I listened to this via my library, so I didn't have to pay for it, so no loss for me.

    One thing I really appreciated is that he took the time to actually discuss menstruation and how the menstrual cycle - and other female stages - can impact hunger, diet, calorie loss/gain, energy levels and the like. Not many people actually look at this even a little bit, they don't even acknowledge that the female body is different to the male body and that the monthly changes we endure have massive impact on so many things. I would like to read a book that goes into that topic as the main focus rather than just a small chapter.

    I do recommend this book if you struggle to understand health, diet, and fitness and/or find the vast amount of info out there to be just too much and too confusing.

  • Anastasia

    Rather biassed and lots of conflicting and inaccurate advice.

  • Ciarán Murray

    I wish I had this book when I started training for powerlifting/ going to the gym. Will be using this as my go-to for people asking me gym/ diet-related questions in the future. While I had a fairly good understanding of the topics brought up as I have been training for an extended period, this book is a great evidence-based insight into basic dieting and autoregulation without bogging down in research papers.
    Only 4 stars as the author does go on some tangents that I think would have been better suited in his other book Not a Life Coach

  • Rachel Sloan

    A lot of ‘later you will read’ ‘further on in the book..’ and was so constant it actually got annoying!

    Had a lot of good information however was very typical and uses way too many metaphors to explain things

  • MD

    Def for beginners only. And he gives relationship advice. He’s a PT so it’s a bit annoying. Felt more like a memoir with some biology mixed in.

  • Nik

    I didn’t agree with all of it, but I definitely learnt something & I loved the delivery.

  • Luciana Rosa (Bookmark Curiosities)

    Very sensible book.
    James debunks fad diets and explains in a very simple way the basics of diet and diet exercise, without pushing any particular method.

  • Cindy Walsh

    Overall, I learned not too worry so much about what I eat and just move more throughout the day. Move, move, move. Basic common sense, but people like me get caught up on fitness fallacies. And diet hype. I like how he wrote about how it is just plain hype! But……. I listened to his book on audible and it was so very, very difficult because of his voice. Wow!! So low and a strong accent. I will probably have to get the book and read it to fully understand everything he talked about because it was so hard to listen too while walking. ( I had to keep relaying it) But mostly, it was a good read about eating healthier and choosing to burn more calories then eating more calories. Just keep moving.

  • Breanna Mansell

    Yes this book has a lot of the info ha has.om his platform. Lucky for me I would rather read my information than watch it.

    I have left this book more educated on weight-loss and factors that effect it. For that I will be forever grateful to James Smith. The crowning point for me was learning about female fat loss. Yes it's different than fat loss for men.

    Anyone who has tried the endless array of diets and found nothing works this book will help you.

  • Fizz McBay

    What a motivating book! I took on board a lot of the advice as I was reading, and today, a day after finishing the book and a week after starting it, I have lost 2lbs. Everything is clear and just makes a bit more sense.

    I think I will need to keep the book on hand to re-read sections when my motivation is lacking, but currently I’ve done a complete 180! It was so fascinating to read about the impact of female physiology on diets and fat loss and just starting the new way of life at the right time in the month has made it so easy.

    I’ll be recommending this to all my friends!

  • Lucie

    3.5 / 5

  • Joe Butt

    Perfect summary of little changes you can make in your life to improve health and overall fitness. I'm sure I'll be using the on knowledge from his chapter disproving fitness fads for years to come.