‘Downfall’: Reviews of Nadine Dorries’ latest book suggest clue is in the name

Reviews of Nadine Dorries’ latest book have started to flood in, with several people suggesting she may have inadvertently pointed to her own demise in the title.

The former culture secretary said she felt compelled to follow up on the release of The Plot, which detailed the so-called political assassination of Boris Johnson, with a book on how the Conservatives were ultimately responsible for their own fall from grace.

The new release, which contains more “blether and eyebrow-raising assertions” (Guardian) than an episode of Made in Chelsea, contains exposés on “the reason why Rishi Sunak left the D-Day celebrations early” and “group sex sessions” planned via WhatsApp and “held between late-night votes in a certain office in Portcullis House”.

One source close to Kemi Badenoch told The Independent: “Nadine is a fantastic writer of fiction… and never misses a bandwagon on which to flog her book.”

VD: “Why are you choosing to tell people that?”ND: “It’s in an office Victoria – it’s not their private life.”@NadineDorries, Tory MP 2005-2023, discusses being sent a picture by an MP where he was naked along with another male MP in a Westminster office.#Newsnight pic.twitter.com/JDrwC3nsa7— BBC Newsnight (@BBCNewsnight) November 21, 2024

Victoria Derbyshire has raised questions over whether revelations contained in the book are fit for public consumption, namely one allegation that she was sent a picture by an MP where he was naked along with another male MP in a Westminster office.

Ian Dunt, meanwhile, writing in the i, said readers will be confronted with many questions when reading the book.

“Naturally you will question why it was written and, more pertinently, why it was published. You will question what happened to this country that the author of a book like this one could have found herself at the heights of its political life.

“You will question your own life and why you have chosen to spend it in this way, reading books like this.”

Her enthusiasm for Boris Johnson goes so deep that she has invented an entirely fictional universe in order to defend him. My review of Nadine Dorries’ latest book.https://t.co/ITntUCuzwI— Ian Dunt (@IanDunt) November 21, 2024

No need to overload your cranberry sauce with sugar this holiday season − a food scientist explains how to cook with fewer added sweeteners

The holidays are full of delicious and indulgent food and drinks. It’s hard to resist dreaming about cookies, specialty cakes, rich meats and super saucy side dishes.

Lots of the healthy raw ingredients used in holiday foods can end up overshadowed by sugar and starch. While adding extra sugar may be tasty, it’s not necessarily good for metabolism. Understanding the food and culinary science behind what you’re cooking means you can make a few alterations to a recipe and still have a delicious dish that’s not overloaded with sugar.

Particularly, if you’re a person living with Type 1 diabetes, the holidays may come with an additional layer of stress and wild blood glucose levels. It’s no time for despair though – it is the holidays, after all.

Cranberries are one seasonal, tasty fruit that can be modified in recipes to be more Type 1 diabetic-friendly – or friendly to anyone looking for a sweet dish without the extra sugar.

I am a food scientist and a Type 1 diabetic. Understanding food composition, ingredient interactions and metabolism has been a literal lifesaver for me.

Type 1 diabetes defined

Type 1 diabetes is all day every day, with no breaks during sleep, no holidays or weekends off, no remission and no cure. Type 1 diabetics don’t make insulin, a hormone that is required to live that promotes the uptake of glucose, or sugar, into cells. The glucose in your cells then supplies your body with energy at the molecular level.

Consequently, Type 1 diabetics take insulin by injection, or via an insulin pump attached to their bodies, and hope that it works well enough to stabilize blood sugar and metabolism, minimize health complications over time and keep us alive.

Type 1 diabetics mainly consider the type and amount of carbohydrates in foods when figuring out how much insulin to take, but they also need to understand the protein and fat interactions in food to dose, or bolus, properly.

In addition to insulin, Type 1 diabetics don’t make another hormone, amylin, which slows gastric motility. This means food moves more quickly through our digestive tract, and we often feel very hungry. Foods that are high in fat, proteins and fiber can help to stave off hunger for a while.

Cranberries, a seasonal treat

Cranberries are native to North America and grow well in the Northeastern and Midwestern states, where they are in season between late September and December. They’re a staple on holiday tables all over the country.

Cranberries are a classic Thanksgiving side dish, but cranberry sauce tends to contain a lot of sugar.
bhofack2/iStock via Getty Images

One cup of whole, raw cranberries contains 190 calories. They are 87% water, with trace amounts of protein and fat, 12 grams of carbohydrates and just over 4 grams of soluble fiber. Soluble fiber combines well with water, which is good for digestive health and can slow the rise of blood glucose.

Cranberries are high in potassium, which helps with electrolyte balance and cell signaling, as well as other important nutrients such as antioxidants, beta-carotene and vitamin C. They also contain vitamin K, which helps with healthy blood clotting.

Cranberries’ flavor and aroma come from compounds in the fruit such as cinnamates that add cinnamon notes, vanillin for hints of vanilla, benzoates and benzaldehyde, which tastes like almonds.

Cranberries are high in pectin, a soluble starch that forms a gel and is used as a setting agent in making jams and jellies, which is why they thicken readily with minimal cooking. Their beautiful red jewel-tone color is from a class of compounds called anthocyanins and proanthocyanidins, which are associated with treating some types of infection.

They also contain phenolics, which are protective compounds produced by the plant. These compounds, which look like rings at the molecular level, interact with proteins in your saliva to produce a dry, astringent sensation that makes your mouth pucker. Similarly, a compound called benzoic acid naturally found in cranberries adds to the fruit’s sourness.

These chemical ingredients make them extremely sour and bitter, and difficult to consume raw. To mitigate these flavors and effects, most cranberry recipes call for lots of sugar.

All that extra sugar can make cranberry dishes hard to consume for Type 1 diabetics, because the sugars cause a rapid rise in blood glucose.

Cranberries without sugar?

Type 1 diabetics – or anyone who wants to reduce the added sugars they’re consuming – can try a few culinary tactics to lower their sugar intake while still enjoying this holiday treat.

Don’t cook your cranberries much longer after they pop. You’ll still have a viscous cranberry liquid without the need for as much sugar, since cooking concentrates some of the bitter compounds, making them more pronounced in your dish.

Adding spices to your cranberries can enhance the dish’s flavor without extra sugar.
klenova/iStock via Getty Images

Adding cinnamon, clove, cardamom, nutmeg and other warming spices gives the dish a depth of flavor. Adding heat with a spicy chili pepper can make your cranberry dish more complex while reducing sourness and astringency. Adding salt can reduce the cranberries’ bitterness, so you won’t need lots of sugar.

For a richer flavor and a glossy quality, add butter. Butter also lubricates your mouth, which tends to compliment the dish’s natural astringency. Other fats such as heavy cream or coconut oil work, too.

Adding chopped walnuts, almonds or hazelnuts can slow glucose absorption, so your blood glucose may not spike as quickly. Some new types of sweeteners, such as allulose, taste sweet but don’t raise blood sugar, requiring minimal to no insulin. Allulose has GRAS – generally regarded as safe – status in the U.S., but it isn’t approved as an additive in Europe.

This holiday season you can easily cut the amount of sugar added to your cranberry dishes and get the health benefits without a blood glucose spike.

4 books about food and family to dive into over Thanksgiving break

For some people, family is a source of joy, support and comfort. For others, it’s more complicated. Food, especially during the holidays, has the potential to bring families together. If you find yourself with some free time between turkey, mashed potatoes and pumpkin pie, consider picking up one of these books to enter other families’ worlds and their interactions with food. 
“Crying in H Mart” by Michelle Zauner
(Allina Xiao for WSN)
In “Crying in H Mart,” Michelle Zauner presents a raw memoir, about her relationship with her mother. Growing up, Zauner struggled to meet her mother’s high expectations, but, at the end of the day, they never failed to bond over a bowl of kalguksu, hand-cut noodle soup. As she grows up and moves away from home, Zauner begins feeling distant from her Korean identity. However, when her mother is diagnosed with cancer, she is drawn back home and reintegrated into Korean traditions and foods. This book might just leave you with a pile of soaked tissues, a craving for a warm bowl of noodles and a desire to go hug your mom. 
“A Tree Grows in Brooklyn” by Betty Smith
(Allina Xiao for WSN)
For the Nolan family, how they will afford their next meal is an ever-present burden. In “A Tree Grows in Brooklyn,” Betty Smith tells the story of young Francie Nolan who grows up in a very poor family in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. Although her parents are under constant stress, Francie finds joy in her mother’s creativity to feed the family with little ingredients — she even appreciates holding a warm cup of black coffee while sitting around the table with her family, even though she doesn’t enjoy the taste. The family’s struggles are universally relatable, but also utterly heartbreaking as something always seems to go wrong for them. As Francie grows up, these formative years in poverty impact her ability to gain upward mobility, but her family keeps her rooted. This story will help you reflect on your own family and find gratitude in the small joys of life. 
“Milk Fed” by Melissa Broder
(Allina Xiao for WSN)
Content Warning: This book is about eating disorders.
In “Milk Fed” by Melissa Broder, food, family, religion and desire come to a head. What she eats and how many calories she consumes influence every decision the 24-year-old protagonist, Rachel, makes. Her restrictive mindset and the Jewish religion were both modeled by her mother during her upbringing — only one of which she has kept into her adulthood. As the book continues, she meets Miriam, an Orthodox Jew who works at a frozen-yogurt shop she frequently visits, and Rachel becomes intrigued by Miriam’s lifestyle, family and freedom around food. As Rachel is introduced into Miriam’s world, she begins to heal her relationship with food and family, learning that we don’t only need to satiate our hunger, but also our desire for human connection. 
“Cursed Bread” by Sophie Mackintosh
(Allina Xiao for WSN)
Sophie Mackintosh’s novel “Cursed Bread” is inspired by a true and unsolved mystery of the mass poisoning of a French village. The book focuses on Elodie, the baker’s wife, who is unsatisfied with her repetitive life in the simple town of Pont-Saint-Esprit. Elodie’s unhappiness in her own family and home is exacerbated by her husband, who seems to be more interested in his bread and bakery than in her. Breaking the pattern of her dull life, an ambassador and his wife, Violet, arrive in town and Elodie is intrigued by their odd life. As soon as they arrive, strange things begin to happen and a mysterious illness spreads throughout the town. “Cursed Bread” grows feverish as Elodie loses her understanding of reality, leaving the reader’s eyes wide and hungry for more. This book is perfect for anyone who wants to escape their own world and become entranced by another.
Contact Siobhán Minerva at [email protected].

Spotify expands its audiobook library via a deal with publisher Bloomsbury

Spotify is expanding its audiobook selection thanks to a deal with publisher Bloomsbury, adding over 1,000 books from authors like Sarah J Maas, Alan Moore and Ann Patchett. The new titles are arriving just a day after Spotify introduced new tools for audiobooks, like playlists, visual accompaniments and a sleep timer.Some of the new audiobooks include fantasies for adults like Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell (Susanna Clarke), award winners including Cuddy by Benjamin Myers and kids adventure books like Katherine Rundell’s Impossible Creatures. The new collection also includes non-fiction titles by historians like Peter Frankopan and Want, an anthology collected by Gillian Anderson. Narration will be performed by high-end talent like Meryl Streep, Emilia Clarke, Adjoa Andoh, and Jamie Lee Curtis.Spotify started offering audiobooks in the US a year ago, with Premium subscribers gaining access to 15 hours of content per month (that can be topped up with an additional 10 hours for $12.99). With the average audiobook being about 8-12 hours, subscribers to the $11 Premium tier will be able to listen to about a book per month. Spotify said today that it has paid “hundreds of millions of dollars to publishers on an annualized basis.”Bloomsbury already offers its audiobooks on Amazon’s Audible, with many of the titles mentioned above already available on that platform (Want, Cuddy and others). Depending on the audiobook, it may be cheaper to just buy it outright than topping up your Spotify account, if want to listen to multiple titles in a month.If you buy something through a link in this article, we may earn commission.

Laos tourists speak out over fears of methanol poisoning after six die

Laostourists have spoken of their fears after six people have died from suspected alcohol poisoning in the tourist town of Vang Vieng.Holly Bowles, 19, died more than a week after falling ill at the Nana Backpacker Hostel, which previously said it had given out free shots to around 100 guests on 12 November.Her friend Bianca Jones, also 19; British lawyer Simone White, 28, from Orpington in south-east London; an American and two Danes have also been confirmed dead.Toni Shahar, an Israeli tourist, said: “I won’t drink from a glass. I won’t drink from an opened bottle and I won’t drink homemade alcohol. And I think that’s the actions I’m going to do.”

DNA need not apply: Books in brief

Good NatureKathy Willis Bloomsbury (2024)Trained as a palaeoecologist in the analysis of plant fossils, Kathy Willis began to study live plants only when she started working at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, in Richmond, UK. There, she noticed visitors relishing plants’ fragrances, textures and shades. Then, a scientific paper alerted her to people in hospital wards having a quicker recovery when they had a view of trees rather than brick walls. Her inspiring book presents the fresh science behind such interactions. “We cannot survive without a diverse nature around us,” she concludes.Oceans Rise Empires FallGerard Toal Oxford Univ. Press (2024)This book’s title, from a song in the 2015 musical Hamilton, refers here to the threat that climate change poses to geopolitics. For example, the world’s largest institutional consumer of hydrocarbon fuels is the US military, notes political scientist Gerard Toal — and reducing its consumption would weaken the armed forces. His book analyses competing world powers in terms of three concepts: geopolitical “fields” and “cultures” and “geospatial revolutions”. He grimly warns: “Oceans are rising. And empires may fall sooner than we expect.”Understanding Human DiversityJonathan Marks Cambridge Univ. Press (2024)Crucial as it is, our DNA does not define what makes us human, argues biological anthropologist Jonathan Marks in his short, catchy appraisal of human diversity. No chimpanzee, he remarks, ever gave her daughter a twig and said, “Use this well for collecting termites. It belonged to your grandmother.” Humans do pass on such cultural knowledge, along with their genes. Marks tactfully tackles the controversial and complex intersection of genetics and culture with ethnicity and sex, noting “Human variation is not race.”The Story of Nature: A Human HistoryJeremy Mynott Yale Univ. Press (2024)Should humans think of themselves as “observers, participants, managers, beneficiaries or custodians” of nature, asks author Jeremy Mynott. His lively tour of an immensely diverse subject — nature’s human history — is illuminatingly illustrated with artistic images of nature such as poet and painter William Blake’s portrait of Isaac Newton obsessed with measurement. Beginning with prehistoric cave-painters, then covering agriculturalists, medievalists, romantics and more, he ends with climate change and the future.AI Snake OilArvind Narayanan & Sayash Kapoor Princeton Univ. Press (2024)Why is there “so much misinformation, misunderstanding, and mythology” about artificial intelligence (AI), ask computer scientists Arvind Narayanan and Sayash Kapoor in perhaps the best book on this controversial subject. They find that researchers, companies and the media are all responsible for this public distortion and, as with snake oil, they do so to some extent knowingly. The authors criticize companies for training their AI tools on the works of writers, artists and photographers without credit or compensation.