Nena Baker. The Body Toxic
A thin new book builds a thin, old case against the chemical industry.
December 3rd, 2008
Counter Culture Ronault L.S. Catalani | The immigrant life, with a side of toast.1 comment
November 26th, 2008
Q & A • Philip Gourevitch The Paris Review | On writers, ghosts and Abu Ghraib.0 comments
November 19th, 2008
Is It Just Me Or Is Everything Shit? | Steve Lowe and Alan Mcarthur with Brendan Hay0 comments
November 12th, 2008
WEB Exclusive • Dangerous Women at In Other Words Saturday, Nov. 15. | Female stereotypes confirmed! Gypsy music to soundtrack.2 comments
October 15th, 2008
David Mura: Famous Suicides of the Japanese Empire | Love and loss in Chicago—and ancient Japan.0 comments
October 8th, 2008
Sarah Vowell. The Wordy Shipmates. | Of buckles and corn and hacked-off body parts.0 comments
September 24th, 2008
McCain’s Promise. David Foster Wallace | Saying farewell to ideals.1 comment
September 24th, 2008
Stephen Baker. The Numerati | Smile, you’re on PC.0 comments
September 17th, 2008
Chuck Klosterman. Downtown Owl | Gonna die in this small town/ And that’s probably where they’ll bury me. 0 comments
September 17th, 2008
Paul Auster. Man in the Dark | Paul Auster builds an elaborate fantasy to reflect on real-life loss.0 comments
![]() |
[September 3rd, 2008]
The dust jacket of Nena Baker’s new book, The Body Toxic (North Point Press, 277 pages, $24), depicts two images: On the front, an egg fries in a scratched Teflon pan; on the back, a single drop of milk or infant formula oozes from an overturned baby bottle. The message, of course, is that Teflon and plastic, two wonder products of the consumer age, are poisoning us. Well, before we start running for our lives, let’s face it: A steady diet of fried eggs and cow’s milk or infant formula (instead of breast milk) poses far greater risks to human health than the cookware or containers that deliver them.
Baker, a former investigative reporter for The Oregonian, has written a slim volume about toxins in the environment that builds an even slimmer case against the chemical industry. The human health risks of every one of the chemicals Baker examines are either unknown or unproven. And in at least one case, Baker concedes, the chemical under study hasn’t been found in humans at all. She begins with atrazine, a weed killer that one industry-funded researcher finds causes genital malformations in rare species of frogs. When the servants of Satan who work for the chemical company invite the researcher to duplicate his findings, Dr. Frogman declines because he wants to broaden the study—not to extrapolate the health effects of atrazine on humans but to test it on other species of frogs. Baker’s case against atrazine is further weakened when tests by the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention conclude traces of atrazine in human urine are “below the limit of detection”—Baker’s scientific way of saying government researchers can’t find atrazine in humans anyway.
advertisement
Baker goes on to scrutinize other household chemicals, mostly “endocrine disruptors” that affect reproductive health, such as PBDEs used in flame retardants, phthalates found in cosmetics, bisphenol A from plastic baby bottles, and perfluorinated chemicals used to make Teflon. In every case, however, either test data is inconclusive, scientists disagree on exposure levels, the chemical has already been banned in Canada or the EU and is on its way out in the U.S., or the chemical industry has phased or is phasing it out anyway. Baker argues repeatedly that industry-funded research has skewed science in chemical companies’ favor and the federal Toxic Substances Control Act of 1976 is inadequate for regulating chemicals in the 21st century. Such charges are probably true but hardly new, and Baker’s book is weak at presenting specific examples of malfeasance. In the appendix, Baker offers advice to readers on limiting toxics exposure, but there’s no sense of urgency that such measures matter. Baker writes, for example, that she replaced her Teflon cookware only after it “wore out.” One can only hope not as worn out as her readers will be after slogging through this well-intentioned but unpersuasive book.
RECENT COMMENTS ON “Nena Baker. The Body Toxic”
I have read this book. WW’s review completely missed the point. For intelligent and sophisticated analyses, see reviews by the Washington Post and the Seattle Post-Intelligencer:
...
Wow, this article reads like a FoxNews headline...hello, "servants of satan?" How does Mr. Buckingham propose we investigate the effects of external toxins on the human body? According to hi...








