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The Sleep Revolution: Transforming Your Life, One Night at a Time Hardcover – Big Book, April 5, 2016
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We are in the midst of a sleep deprivation crisis, with profound consequences to our health, our job performance, our relationships and our happiness. What we need is nothing short of a sleep revolution: only by renewing our relationship with sleep can we take back control of our lives.
In The Sleep Revolution, Arianna explores all the latest science on what exactly is going on while we sleep and dream. She takes on the sleeping pill industry, and all the ways our addiction to technology disrupts our sleep. She also offers a range of recommendations and tips from leading scientists on how we can get better and more restorative sleep, and harness its incredible power.
The result is a sweeping, scientifically rigorous, and deeply personal exploration of sleep from all angles, from the history of sleep, to the role of dreams in our lives, to the consequences of sleep deprivation, and the new golden age of sleep science that reveals the vital role sleep plays in our every waking moment and every aspect of our health--from weight gain, diabetes, and heart disease to cancer and Alzheimer’s.
In today's fast-paced, always-connected, perpetually-harried and sleep-deprived world, our need for a good night’s sleep is more important--and elusive--than ever. The Sleep Revolution both sounds the alarm on our worldwide sleep crisis and provides a detailed road map to the great sleep awakening that can help transform our lives, our communities, and our world.
- Print length400 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherHarmony
- Publication dateApril 5, 2016
- Dimensions5.8 x 1.3 x 8.5 inches
- ISBN-101101904003
- ISBN-13978-1101904008
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Editorial Reviews
Review
-- Sheryl Sandberg, Facebook COO and author of Lean In
"Arianna Huffington is one of our leading authorities on the life well-lived. In this passionate, deeply researched book, she reveals everything you need to know about the magic elixir of sleep: from how to get enough, to why it matters. I dare you to read this book and carry on depriving your body (and soul) of the nightly nourishment it so desperately needs."
-- Susan Cain, co-founder of Quiet Revolution and author of Quiet
“In this very thorough and highly readable book, Arianna Huffington explains the history, nature, and science of the sleep problem: why so many people today do not sleep well. And she gives us solutions in the form of evidence-based advice about what to do and what not to do to enjoy the restorative sleep we need. I recommend The Sleep Revolution highly.”
-- Andrew Weil, MD, author of Fast Food, Good Food
“Arianna Huffington has written a book of profound importance. From time to time we'll all find sleep comes hard. For many, it is a constant struggle. Taking Arianna's wise advice to rebuild your relationship with sleep— to befriend rather than struggle with it— will transform your life, putting you back in touch with your more compassionate and intelligent self.”
-- Mark Williams, Emeritus Professor of Clinical Psychology, University of Oxford and Co-author of The Mindful Way Workbook
“The message of Arianna Huffington’s compelling book won me over: You can be your own Prince Charming. You can empower yourself with knowledge— knowledge in this book— to wake yourself up. And then, use that knowledge to put yourself, every night, into a sleep that is healthy and restorative!”
-- Sherry Turkle, Professor of the Social Studies of Science and Technology, MIT and author of Reclaiming Conversation
"Is inadequate sleep the new smoking? Ms. Huffington tackles the issue of our deteriorating sleep hygiene and its serious health and performance consequences in a comprehensive, engaging, and accessible book. A must read for everyone burning the candle on both ends.”
-- Gene Block, Chancellor of UCLA, and Distinguished Professor of Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Sciences
“Science and experience proves it: the foundation of a happy, healthy, energetic, and productive life is a good night’s rest—yet for many of us, it’s hard to turn out the light and turn off our brains. The Sleep Revolution is an invaluable resource for anyone who wants to build the crucial habit of sleep.”
-- Gretchen Rubin, author of The Happiness Project
“Propelled by cutting-edge science and brimming with wisdom and wit, The Sleep Revolution is the single best book about sleep in years. An extraordinary achievement.”
-- A. Roger Ekirch, author of At Day’s Close: Night in Times Past
“In her new book, The Sleep Revolution, Arianna Huffington draws on a remarkable breadth and depth of science, literature, spirituality, and story to remind us that sleep is not just a restorative, but a threshold to the resources of life that wait below our noise. By looking honestly into her own journey, Arianna uncovers important markers in the human journey through detailed research, knit together in a way that broadens our foundation. The chapters ‘Sleep Throughout History’ and ‘Dreams’ are, by themselves, an invaluable contribution to our modern consciousness. The Sleep Revolution unravels the tense threads we tangle ourselves in, giving us a chance to re-engage the forces that sustain us. This book won’t just help you sleep better; it will enliven you while you’re awake.”
-- Mark Nepo, author of Inside the Miracle, The One Life We’re Given, and The Book of Awakening
“Count on Arianna Huffington to write a book on sleep that kept me up at night. The Sleep Revolution is invaluable, interesting, and ultimately necessary for us all. It explains why we are so tired and how that has to change. Here is the science, history, and culture of the role that sleep plays in our lives —and the role that it should really play.”
-- Atul Gawande, MD, MPH, Surgeon, Researcher, and Author of Being Mortal
“A lucid, compelling, and rational narrative on the importance of sleep to our mental, emotional and physical health. In The Sleep Revolution, Arianna Huffington exposes the dangers of our modern-day attitude towards sleep and advocates for a renewed emphasis on the importance of sleep to our well-being. It is nothing short of a call to arms for policy makers, CEOs, parents, educators, hospital administrators, and coaches to confront the fact that insufficient sleep is a modern-day health crisis.”
-- Patrick Fuller, Associate Professor of Neurology, Harvard Medical School and Deaconess Medical Center
"This is one of those books that, if you don’t read, when you’re dead you’re really going to wish you had. I never thought I would have needed a self-help book for sleep, but I did! Sleep is everything – that’s my takeaway, and so you better know how to do it."
-- Bill Maher
About the Author
In May 2005, she launched The Huffington Post, a news and blog site that quickly became one of the most widely-read, linked to, and frequently-cited media brands on the Internet. In 2012, the site won a Pulitzer Prize for national reporting.
She has been named to Time Magazine's list of the world’s 100 most influential people and the Forbes Most Powerful Women list. Originally from Greece, she moved to England when she was 16 and graduated from Cambridge University with an M.A. in economics. At 21, she became president of the famed debating society, the Cambridge Union.
She serves on numerous boards, including The Center for Public Integrity, The Committee to Protect Journalists and Uber.
Her 15th book, The Sleep Revolution: Transforming Your Life, One Night At A Time, on the science, history and mystery of sleep, was published in April 2016 and became an instant New York Times Bestseller.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
OUR CURRENT SLEEP CRISIS
Sarvshreshth Gupta was a first-year analyst at Goldman Sachs in San Francisco in 2015. Overwhelmed by the hundred-hour workweeks, he decided to leave the bank in March. He soon returned, though whether this was a result of social or self-inflicted pressure is still unclear. A week later, he called his father at 2:40 a.m. saying he hadn’t slept in two days. He said he had a presentation to complete and a morning meeting to prepare for, and was alone in the office. His father insisted he go home, and Gupta replied that he would stay at work just a bit longer. A few hours later, he was found dead on the street outside his home. He had jumped from his high-rise building.
Death from overwork has its own word in Japanese (karoshi), in Chinese (guolaosi), and in Korean (gwarosa). No such word exists in English, but the casualties are all around us. And though this is an extreme example of the consequences of not getting enough sleep, sleep deprivation has become an epidemic.
It is a specter haunting the industrialized world. Simply put: we don’t get enough sleep. And it’s a much bigger problem—with much higher stakes—than many of us realize. Both our daytime hours and our nighttime hours are under assault as never before. As the amount of things we need to cram into each day has increased, the value of our awake time has skyrocketed. Benjamin Franklin’s “Time is money!” has become a corporate-world mantra. And this has come at the expense of our time asleep, which since the dawn of the Industrial Revolution we have treated like some dull, distant relative we visit only reluctantly and out of obligation, for as short a time as we can manage.
But scientists are resoundingly confirming what our ancestors knew instinctively: that our sleep is not empty time. Sleep is a time of intense neurological activity—a rich time of renewal, memory consolidation, brain and neurochemical cleansing, and cognitive maintenance. Properly appraised, our sleeping time is as valuable a commodity as the time we are awake. In fact, getting the right amount of sleep enhances the quality of every minute we spend with our eyes open.
But today much of our society is still operating under the collective delusion that sleep is simply time lost to other pursuits, that it can be endlessly appropriated at will to satisfy our increasingly busy lives and overstuffed to-do lists. We see this delusion reflected in the phrase “I’ll sleep when I’m dead” has flooded popular consciousness, including a hit Bon Jovi song, an album by the late rocker Warren Zevon, and a crime film starring Clive Owen. Everywhere you turn, sleep deprivation is glamorized and celebrated: “You snooze, you lose.” The phrase “catch a few z’s” is telling: the last letter of the alphabet used to represent that last thing on our culture’s shared priority list. The combination of a deeply misguided definition of what it means to be successful in today’s world—that it can come only through burnout and stress—along with the distractions and temptations of a 24/7 wired world, has imperiled our sleep as never before.
I experienced firsthand the high price we’re paying for cheating sleep when I collapsed from exhaustion, and it pains me to see dear friends (and strangers) go through the same struggle. Rajiv Joshi is the managing director of the B Team—a nonprofit on whose board I serve, founded by Richard Branson and Jochen Zeitz to help move business beyond profit as the only metric of success. In June 2015, he had a seizure at age thirty-one during a B Team meeting in Bellagio, Italy, collapsing from exhaustion and sleep deprivation. Unable to walk, he spent eight days in a hospital in Bellagio and weeks after in physical therapy. In talking with medical experts, he learned that we all have a “seizure threshold,” and when we don’t take time to properly rest, we move closer and closer to it. Rajiv had crossed his threshold and fallen off the cliff. “The struggle for a more just and sustainable world,” he told me when he was back at work, “is a marathon, not a sprint, and we can’t forget that it starts at home with personal sustainability.”
According to a recent Gallup poll, 40 percent of all American adults are sleep-deprived, clocking significantly less than the recommended minimum seven hours of sleep per night. Getting enough sleep, says Dr. Judith Owens, the director of the Center for Pediatric Sleep Disorders at Boston Children’s Hospital, is “just as important as good nutrition, physical activity, and wearing your seat belt.” But most people hugely underestimate their need for sleep. That’s why sleep, says Dr. Michael Roizen, the chief wellness officer of the Cleveland Clinic, “is our most underrated health habit.” A National Sleep Foundation report backs this up: two-thirds of us are not getting enough sleep on weeknights.
The crisis is global. In 2011, 32 percent of people surveyed in the United Kingdom said they had averaged less than seven hours of sleep a night in the previous six months. By 2014 that number had rocketed up to 60 percent. In 2013, more than a third of Germans and tw-thirds of Japanese surveyed said they do not get sufficient sleep on weeknights. In fact, the Japanese have a term, inemuri, which roughly translates as “to be asleep while present”—that is, to be so exhausted that you fall asleep in the middle of a meeting. This has been praised as a sign of dedication and hard work—but it is actually another symptom of the sleep crisis we are finally confronting.
The wearable-device company Jawbone collects sleep data from thousands of people wearing its UP activity trackers. As a result, we now have a record of the cities that get the least amount of sleep. Tokyo residents sleep a dangerously low 5 hours and 45 minutes a night. Seoul clocks in at 6 hours and 3 minutes; Dubai, 6 hours and 13 minutes; Singapore, 6 hours and 27 minutes; Hong Kong, 6 hours and 29 minutes; and Las Vegas, 6 hours and 32 minutes. When you’re getting less sleep than Las Vegas, you have a problem.
Of course, much of this can be laid at the feet of work—or, more broadly, how we define work, which is colored by how we define success and what’s important in our lives. The unquestioning belief that work should always have the top claim on our time has been a costly one. And it has gotten worse, as technology has allowed a growing number of us to carry our work with us—in our pockets and purses in the form of our phones—wherever we go.
Our houses, our bedrooms—even our beds—are littered with beeping, vibrating, flashing screens. It’s the never-ending possibility of connecting—with friends, with strangers, with the entire world, with every TV show or movie ever made—with just the press of a button that is, not surprisingly, addictive. Humans are social creatures—we’re hardwired to connect. Even when we’re not actually connecting digitally, we’re in a constant state of heightened anticipation. And always being in this state doesn’t exactly put us in the right frame of mind to wind down when it’s time to sleep. Though we don’t give much thought into how we put ourselves to bed, we have little resting places and refueling shrines all over our houses, like little doll beds, where our technology can recharge, even if we can’t.
Being perpetually wired is now considered a prerequisite for success, as Alan Derickson writes in Dangerously Sleepy: “Sleep deprivation now resides within a repertoire of practices deemed essential to survival in a globally competitive world. More so than in the time of Thomas Edison, depriving oneself of necessary rest or denying it to those under one’s control is considered necessary to success in a 24/7/365 society. Americans have a stronger ideological rationale than ever to distrust any sort of dormancy.”
And Americans are anything but dormant. From 1990 to 2000, American workers added the equivalent of another full workweek to their year. A 2014 survey by Skift, a travel website, showed that more than 40 percent of Americans had not taken a single vacation day that year. Much of that added work time has come at the expense of sleep. Dr. Charles Czeisler, the head of the Division of Sleep and Circadian Disorders at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston, estimates that in the past fifty years our sleep on work nights has dropped from eight and a half hours to just under seven. Thirty percent of employed Americans now report getting six hours of sleep or less per night, and nearly 70 percent describe their sleep as insufficient. Getting by on less than six hours of sleep is one of the biggest factors in job burnout.
And for far too many people in the world, the vicious cycle of financial deprivation also feeds into the vicious cycle of sleep deprivation. If you’re working two or three jobs and struggling to make ends meet, “get more sleep” is probably not going to be near the top of your priorities list. As in the case of health care, access to sleep is not evenly—or fairly—distributed. Sleep is another casualty of inequality. A 2013 study from the University of Chicago found that “lower socio-economic position was associated with poorer subjective sleep quality, increased sleepiness and/or increased sleep complaints.” But the paradox here is that the more challenging our circumstances, the more imperative it is to take whatever steps we can to tap in to our resilience to help us withstand and overcome the challenges we face. There’s a reason we’re told on airplanes to “secure your own mask first.”
Where we live can also affect our sleep. “I have never seen a study that hasn’t shown a direct association between neighborhood quality and sleep quality,” said Lauren Hale, a Stony Brook University professor of preventive medicine. If you’re living in a neighborhood with gang warfare and random acts of violence, sleep will inevitably suffer—yet another example of sleep deprivation’s connection with deeper social problems.
THE COST OF LOST SLEEP
It is industrialization, for all its benefits, that has exacerbated our flawed relationship with sleep on such a massive scale. We sacrifice sleep in the name of productivity, but, ironically, our loss of sleep, despite the extra hours we put in at work, adds up to more than eleven days of lost productivity per year per worker, or about $2,280. This results in a total annual cost of sleep deprivation to the US economy of more than $63 billion, in the form of absenteeism and presenteeism (when employees are present at work physically but not really mentally focused). “Americans are not missing work because of insomnia,” said Harvard Medical School professor Ronald C. Kessler. “They are still going to their jobs, but they’re accomplishing less because they’re tired. In an information-based economy, it’s difficult to find a condition that has a greater effect on productivity.”
Sleep disorders cost Australia more than $5 billion a year in health care and indirect costs. And “reduction in life quality” added costs equivalent to a whopping $31.4 billion a year. A report, aptly titled “Re-Awakening Australia,” linked lack of sleep with lost productivity and driving and workplace accidents. In the United Kingdom, a survey showed that one in five employees had recently missed work or come in late because of sleep deprivation. The researchers estimated that this is equivalent to a loss of more than 47 million hours of work per year, or a £453 million loss in productivity. And almost a third of all UK employees reported feeling tired every morning. Yet, though awareness is spreading, few companies have given sleep the priority it deserves, considering its effects on their bottom line. In Canada, 26 percent of the workforce reported having called in sick because of sleep deprivation. And nearly two-thirds of Canadian adults report feeling tired “most of the time.”
It turns out that women need more sleep than men, so the lack of sleep has even more negative mental and physical effects on them. Duke Medical Center researchers found that women are at a greater risk for heart disease, Type 2 diabetes, and depression. “We found that for women, poor sleep is strongly associated with high levels of psychological distress, and greater feelings of hostility, depression and anger,” said Edward Suarez, the lead author of the study. “In contrast, these feelings were not associated with the same degree of sleep disruption in men.”
As women have entered the workplace—a workplace created in large measure by men, which uses our willingness to work long hours until we ultimately burn out as a proxy for commitment and dedication—they are still stuck with the heavy lifting when it comes to housework. The upshot is that women end up making even more withdrawals from their sleep bank. “They have so many commitments, and sleep starts to get low on the totem pole,” says Michael Breus, the author of Beauty Sleep. “They may know that sleep should be a priority, but then, you know, they’ve just got to get that last thing done. And that’s when it starts to get bad.”
According to Dr. William Dement, the founder of the Stanford Sleep Disorders Clinic (the first of its kind), working mothers who have young children at home have seen an additional 241 hours of work and commuting time added to their lives annually since 1969.
Sarah Bunton, a mother and cognitive-skills trainer, described her experience on The Huffington Post: “Do you ever have one of those days where you want to hit pause? Let me rephrase: do you ever have a day where you don’t want to hit pause? . . . There really isn’t an end of the day for most moms, working or otherwise. There’s usually not a beginning, either, just a continuation of whatever chaos preceded the momentary silence . . . Mommy wants a nap.”
“Let’s face it, women today are tired. Done. Cooked. Fried,” wrote Karen Brody, founder of the meditation program Bold Tranquility. “I coach busy women and this is what they tell me all the time: ‘I spent years getting educated and now I don’t have any energy to work.’ ”
Dr. Frank Lipman, the founder of the Eleven Eleven Wellness Center in New York, sees so many patients who are sleep-deprived and exhausted that he came up with his own term for them. “I started calling these patients ‘spent,’ because that was how they seemed to me,” he writes. He compares this to his time working in rural South Africa: “There I saw many diseases arising from poverty and malnutrition but I didn’t see anyone who was ‘spent,’ as I do today in New York.”
The world is too much with us; late and soon,
Getting and spending, we lay waste our powers . . .
For this, for everything, we are out of tune.
—William Wordsworth, “The World Is Too Much with Us”
Product details
- Publisher : Harmony; 1st edition (April 5, 2016)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 400 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1101904003
- ISBN-13 : 978-1101904008
- Item Weight : 1.1 pounds
- Dimensions : 5.8 x 1.3 x 8.5 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #383,356 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #283 in Sleep Disorders
- #5,626 in Success Self-Help
- #8,987 in Personal Transformation Self-Help
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Arianna Huffington is the co-founder, president, and editor-in-chief of the Huffington Post Media Group, and author of fifteen books.
In May 2005, she launched The Huffington Post, a news and blog site that quickly became one of the most widely-read, linked to, and frequently-cited media brands on the Internet. In 2012, the site won a Pulitzer Prize for national reporting.
She has been named to Time Magazine's list of the world’s 100 most influential people and the Forbes Most Powerful Women list. Originally from Greece, she moved to England when she was 16 and graduated from Cambridge University with an M.A. in economics. At 21, she became president of the famed debating society, the Cambridge Union.
She serves on numerous boards, including The Center for Public Integrity and The Committee to Protect Journalists.
Her book, Thrive: The Third Metric to Redefining Success and Creating a Life of Well-Being, Wisdom, and Wonder, debuted at #1 on the New York Times Bestseller list. Her 15th book, The Sleep Revolution: Transforming Your Life One Night At A Time, on the science, history and mystery of sleep, will be published on April 5, 2016.
Customer reviews
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Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find the book excellently researched and well-written, with detailed scientific information and astonishing stories. Moreover, they appreciate how it takes readers through all aspects of sleep, helping with insomnia and promoting better sleep hygiene. However, the book receives mixed feedback regarding its pacing, with several customers describing it as having a lot of fluff, and one noting several hundred pages of repetition.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers find the book informative and well-researched, providing detailed scientific information and serving as a wonderful resource.
"...life from each passing moment by making you more alert, attentive, creative, healthy, and happy. God Bless You...." Read more
"...Ms. Huffington's book is very approachable; backed by scientific evidence and translated through her own personal journey and struggles with sleep...." Read more
"...The book is interesting and helpful for those that know little about sleep hygiene and how that might correct it...." Read more
"...She presents the science thoroughly and accessibly, talking to nearly every sleep researcher under the sun...." Read more
Customers praise the book's approach to sleep quality, noting it helps with insomnia and promotes better sleep hygiene. One customer mentions how the brain uses sleep to chemically function, while another highlights its comprehensive coverage of sleep scenarios.
"...This book will reinforce your good sleep habits, and it will give you a new tip or two you did not know before...." Read more
"...of the issues surrounding the fatigue epidemic, the devaluing of sleep in societies and perhaps self awareness of their own sleep struggles...." Read more
"...a lucid window into how much the thriving of our minds and bodies depends on good sleep and how we can achieve it. --..." Read more
"...but for the most part this book covers the topic and the negative impacts from poor sleep at a higher level...." Read more
Customers find the book readable and engaging, with one mentioning it serves as a good introduction to the topic.
"...moment by making you more alert, attentive, creative, healthy, and happy. God Bless You. Sleep Well, Live Well." Read more
"...but maybe for the general public that are not sleeping well, it is a good read. It does have good recommendations." Read more
"...Arianna Huffington writes in a style that keeps your interest. You wouldn't think that a book on sleep would be that interesting...." Read more
"...This book is useless. Save your money. How did it become so famous? You’re better off using google. Honestly." Read more
Customers find the book well written and readable, with one customer particularly appreciating its literary references and poetry.
"...out maximum life from each passing moment by making you more alert, attentive, creative, healthy, and happy. God Bless You...." Read more
"...Ms. Huffington's book is very approachable; backed by scientific evidence and translated through her own personal journey and struggles with sleep...." Read more
"...It was written in an engaging style that made me want to continue learning about the topic...." Read more
"...Overall though, -absolutely worth a read!" Read more
Customers find the stories in the book astonishing.
"...but the research data and the additional information and stories were astonishing...." Read more
"...hours per night and this book gives you tons of evidence and stories to back it all up. Must read for everyone." Read more
"Well researched. Thoughtfully written. Good story illustrations. Wish there had been a list or links to more resources at the end" Read more
"Parts of the book were interesting, but I can't say I learned anything new." Read more
Customers find the pacing of the book unsatisfactory, describing it as fluff with a thin research section.
"...Research section is thin. Tips for sleeping include - don't sleep with TV on, don't eat before bed... ground breaking. Skip this one." Read more
"I thought it was actually a lot of fluff. A lot about the history and story of sleep which I didn't find interesting at all...." Read more
"Incredibly disappointing. Superficial. No new information." Read more
"Not captivating..." Read more
Customers find the book repetitive, with one mentioning several hundred pages of repeated content.
"...is very good and the research covered extensive, but there is too much redundancy in proving the various points made." Read more
"Presents lots of good points though academic with too much explantation; good marketing for Huffington Post, etc." Read more
"Hugely disappointing. Several hundred pages of repeats of how important sleep is..." Read more
"At parts, it seems repetitive..." Read more
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Great Read but Flawed Product
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on April 7, 2016On a scorching afternoon in a remote Indian village, a woman walking out from a temple spots a beggar napping under a tree. She walks up to him, flips his bowl up, and drops a few coins into the bowl. The noise of the coins wakes up this hungry man in tattered clothes.
"You can get more money if you keep your bowl open when you sleep," the lady scolded him.
"For a few coins, I don't want to give away my priceless sleep," the poor soul shot back, turned around, and went back to napping!
Arianna Huffington's timely book reminds us that our sleep indeed is priceless. She weaves her personal experience as an over-worked executive with quotes from the leading researchers to convince us to participate actively in this revolution.
"Is this book going to help my patients?" The is the litmus test I always use when evaluating a self-help book.
The answer is a clear and convincing YES.
It will help you even if you are doing everything right about your sleep. This book will reinforce your good sleep habits, and it will give you a new tip or two you did not know before.
We invest one-third of our life in sleep, and we all are guilty of ignoring this investment. Arianna gives you tips to help you earn the most return on your investment in sleep. If you follow these tips, you shall wake up with lasting vigor and vitality every day.
We are on this God-given earth only for a limited time. Arianna Huffington's new book will help you squeeze out maximum life from each passing moment by making you more alert, attentive, creative, healthy, and happy.
God Bless You.
Sleep Well, Live Well.
- Reviewed in the United States on May 11, 2016This book is a good overview for those stepping into awareness of the issues surrounding the fatigue epidemic, the devaluing of sleep in societies and perhaps self awareness of their own sleep struggles. Ms. Huffington exposes the long-term impact sleep deprivation has across many health and societal factors to her reading audience. I have a sleep disorder and have served on national committees as a lay consultant to researchers and clinicians. Ms. Huffington's book is very approachable; backed by scientific evidence and translated through her own personal journey and struggles with sleep. It's a conversation from one sleepy woman, speaking from her own path to realization and transformation, with the tired multitudes who read her book. She's giving a wake-up call to go to sleep and then with the new-earned energy, become a catalyst for change in your own community. Sometimes it takes a lime-light voice to draw listeners to what researchers, physicians and sleep professional have been saying for the past twenty (or more years). I applaud Ms. Huffington for speaking candidly about her own "bottom" - her literal fall and injury resulting from sleep deprivation. Reminds us that no one is super human and that our bodies deserve the moon-phase rest states that the universe gifts us every night. Thank you Arianna!
- Reviewed in the United States on October 4, 2016The book arrived on time in good condition so as far as the logistics, this was a good experience. The book is interesting and helpful for those that know little about sleep hygiene and how that might correct it. It spends a lot of time discussing that sleep is a problem. Given the size of the book, I was expecting more detail but maybe for the general public that are not sleeping well, it is a good read. It does have good recommendations.
- Reviewed in the United States on April 8, 2016If you spend a third of your life sleeping, you'd think that a third of all books would be about sleep. Turns out there are hardly *any* good recent books out there on sleep, as I found while researching the topic. So I was thrilled that Arianna had tackled the topic with her usual thoroughness, evangelical persuasiveness and panache.
Part One, "Wake-Up Call", makes the case for sleep being about as crucially important as breathing, how we've been giving it short shrift for a really long time, and how we need to stop that, like, now. Arianna, herself having been chronically sleep-deprived (with dramatically adverse consequences which I'll let you read about) makes a particularly impassioned plea against our achievement-oriented culture's neglect and contempt for sleep. She presents the science thoroughly and accessibly, talking to nearly every sleep researcher under the sun.
Part Two, "The Way Forward", has practical solutions for getting better quality and quantity of sleep. The usual suggestions are there: keep the room dark and cool at night; no caffeine or alcohol in the evening; adhere to set sleep & wake times; use the bed only for sleep & sex; don't look at electronic devices late at night since they screw with your circadian rhythms & melatonin. But what if you share a bed? Should your kids sleep with you? What about naps? Athletes? Insomnia? Arianna transmits the latest thinking on all of these topics and much more. For its importance in our lives, sleep remains one of the great mysteries of science. Arianna provides us with a lucid window into how much the thriving of our minds and bodies depends on good sleep and how we can achieve it.
-- Ali Binazir, M.D., M.Phil., author of The Tao of Dating: The Smart Woman's Guide to Being Absolutely Irresistible, the #1-rated dating book on Amazon for 4+ years
Top reviews from other countries
- RF.Reviewed in the United Kingdom on September 29, 2019
5.0 out of 5 stars INTERESTING BUT IT IS NOT FOR LONG TIME INSOMNIACS
This is a well written pleasant read with guidance for newcomers to insomnia.
One person found this helpfulReport -
Client AmazonReviewed in France on January 2, 2017
5.0 out of 5 stars ECRIT par une des personnes les plus influentes de la planète
Une personne qui a bien fait le tour de la question avec des solutions inédites comme le sel de magnésium dont je ne peux désormais plus me passer.
ARIANNA a compris ce qui est vraiment important dans la vie. Si on n'a pas un bon sommeil réparateur, tout le reste ne sert à rien !
A recommander.
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CiCi 2000Reviewed in Germany on July 29, 2016
5.0 out of 5 stars Ein sehr gut recherchiertes Buch
Dieses Buch sollte meiner Meinung nach von jedem gelesen werden! Schlaf wird vor allem in unserer schnellen, auf Erfolg orientieren Gesellschaft, oft als unnötig erachtet. The Sleep Revolution zeigt, wie wichtig der Schlaf wirklich ist und wie sehr unser Erfolg im Privatleben oder im Beruf von einem guten Schlaf abhängt. Das Buch ist dank Arianna Huffingtons Schreibstil sehr leicht zu lesen und durch ihre Erzählungen von eigenen Erfahrungen wird das Buch noch um einiges lebensnaher.
- Patricia TriguerosReviewed in Spain on February 5, 2017
5.0 out of 5 stars Highly recommended!
Highly recommended! found it by coincidence and looked for it in Amazon kindle. Great to have it now in my virtual library forever. Two thumbs up!!!!
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MAGReviewed in Mexico on September 22, 2018
5.0 out of 5 stars De mis libros favoritos!
Si deseas hacer cambios en tu vida respecto a tus hábitos o rutina de sueño, este libro es una mina! Viene con bastantes referencias para seguir leyendo sobre el tema. Con mucha información interesante que definitivamente deja una huella en tu mente. Una fuente de motivación para hacer tu propia revolución y priorizar dormir cada vez más.