Some Authors from Project Gutenberg

Authors

Here e-books and audiobooks taken from Project Gutenberg and directly available on Our Server. Authors are ordered alphabetically.

abbott
aho
alas
albertazzi
alcott
alger
almeida
anonymous
apollinaire
appleton
ariosto
arnold
arthur
austen
balzac
barrili
baudelaire
baum
berlioz
blasco
braun
bronte
caballero
cable
caine
caldecott
camoes
capuana
carroll
castelnuovo
cervantes
chaucer
chesterton
collodi
dannunzio
daudet
davis
deamicis
dickens
dickinson
diderot
digiacomo
dostoyevsky
doyle
dumas
edgeworth
edison
eliot
farina
fitzgerald
flaubert
fogazzaro
fontane
freud
galdos
goethe
grimm
hang
hardy
harold
harte
hauff
hawthorne
henty
heyse
hugo
james
joyce
kafka
kipling
lafayette
lafontaine
lamartine
landor
lang
lanzi
laut
lee
london
longfellow
lovecraft
mansfield
marx
maupassant
melville
moliere
montgomery
monti
musset
napoleon
palacio
panzini
paris
pater
pellico
pepys
prevost
punch
rilke
robespierre
rohlfs
sade
salome
sand
schiller
scott
serao
shakespeare
stendhal
stevenson
stocker
sue
tagore
thackeray
twain
valera
verlaine
verne
voltaire
wharton
whitman
wilde
yeats
yonge
younge
zamenhof
zola

Food additive emulsifiers and cancer risk: Results from the French prospective NutriNet-Santé cohort

by Laury Sellem, Bernard Srour, Guillaume Javaux, Eloi Chazelas, Benoit Chassaing, Emilie Viennois, Charlotte Debras, Nathalie Druesne-Pecollo, Younes Esseddik, Fabien Szabo de Edelenyi, Nathalie Arnault, Cédric Agaësse, Alexandre De Sa, Rebecca Lutchia, Inge Huybrechts, Augustin Scalbert, Fabrice Pierre, Xavier Coumoul, Chantal Julia, Emmanuelle Kesse-Guyot, Benjamin Allès, Pilar Galan, Serge Hercberg, Mélanie Deschasaux-Tanguy, Mathilde Touvier

Background

Emulsifiers are widely used food additives in industrially processed foods to improve texture and enhance shelf-life. Experimental research suggests deleterious effects of emulsifiers on the intestinal microbiota and the metabolome, leading to chronic inflammation and increasing susceptibility to carcinogenesis. However, human epidemiological evidence investigating their association with cancer is nonexistent. This study aimed to assess associations between food additive emulsifiers and cancer risk in a large population-based prospective cohort.

Methods and findings

This study included 92,000 adults of the French NutriNet-Santé cohort without prevalent cancer at enrolment (44.5 y [SD: 14.5], 78.8% female, 2009 to 2021). They were followed for an average of 6.7 years [SD: 2.2]. Food additive emulsifier intakes were estimated for participants who provided at least 3 repeated 24-h dietary records linked to comprehensive, brand-specific food composition databases on food additives. Multivariable Cox regressions were conducted to estimate associations between emulsifiers and cancer incidence. Overall, 2,604 incident cancer cases were diagnosed during follow-up (including 750 breast, 322 prostate, and 207 colorectal cancers). Higher intakes of mono- and diglycerides of fatty acids (FAs) (E471) were associated with higher risks of overall cancer (HR high vs. low category = 1.15; 95% CI [1.04, 1.27], p-trend = 0.01), breast cancer (HR = 1.24; 95% CI [1.03, 1.51], p-trend = 0.04), and prostate cancer (HR = 1.46; 95% CI [1.09, 1.97], p-trend = 0.02). In addition, associations with breast cancer risk were observed for higher intakes of total carrageenans (E407 and E407a) (HR = 1.32; 95% CI [1.09, 1.60], p-trend = 0.009) and carrageenan (E407) (HR = 1.28; 95% CI [1.06, 1.56], p-trend = 0.01). No association was detected between any of the emulsifiers and colorectal cancer risk. Several associations with other emulsifiers were observed but were not robust throughout sensitivity analyses. Main limitations include possible exposure measurement errors in emulsifiers intake and potential residual confounding linked to the observational design.

Conclusions

In this large prospective cohort, we observed associations between higher intakes of carrageenans and mono- and diglycerides of fatty acids with overall, breast and prostate cancer risk. These results need replication in other populations. They provide new epidemiological evidence on the role of emulsifiers in cancer risk.

Trial registration

ClinicalTrials.gov NCT03335644.

America’s Retreat from Victory; The Story of George Catlett Marshall by Joseph McCarthy (1908 – 1957)

Senator Joseph McCarthy examines the life of General George Catlett Marshall, particularly his role in government beginning in 1945 as United States Special Envoy to China, and encompassing his role of Secretary of State in the late 1940’s. This book can provide context which is important to a rounded understanding of how Communist China came to be a nation in 1949, and Marshall’s crucial role as Secretary of State in its birth. – Summary by Robert L. Morel

Short Strain of Music from the Orchestra, A by Thomas Moore (1779 – 1852)

LibriVox volunteers bring you 14 recordings of A Short Strain of Music from the Orchestra by Thomas Moore.
This was the Weekly Poetry project for February 4, 2024.
——
[1]”A certain Spaniard, one night late, met an Indian woman in the streets of Cozco, and would have taken her to his home, but she cried out, ‘For God’s sake, Sir, let me go; for that pipe, which you hear in yonder tower, calls me with great passion, and I cannot refuse the summons; for love constrains me to go, that I may be his wife, and he my husband.'”—”Garcilasso de la Véga,” in Sir Paul Ryeaut’s translation.

Discrimination from anti-Zionist beliefs

A UK court has ruled people cannot be fired for being anti-Zionist.

That policy is just: whether to be Zionist or anti-Zionist is a matter
of political views, and people should not be fired for disagreeing
about those.

Being antisemitic is a different matter: that is a form of bigotry,
like antimuslimism or antiarabism. We must be careful to distinguish
clearly between antisemitism and criticism of Israel or its actions.

I am pro-Israel and pro-Palestine.

Slave Narratives: A Folk History of Slavery in the United States from Interviews with Former Slaves, Volume VII, Kentucky Narratives by Various

These volumes of slave narratives are the product of the Federal Writers Project sponsored by the Library of Congress and the Work Project Administration. They consist of verbatim records of personal interviews with former slaves conducted during 1936-1938.

“These life histories, taken down as far as possible in the narrators’ words, constitute an invaluable body of unconscious evidence or indirect source material, . . . The narratives belong to folk history—history recovered from the memories and lips of participants or eye-witnesses,” This is for the state of Kentucky, Volume 7 in a series of 34 volumes. – Summary by Larry Wilson

History of the Papacy from the Great Schism to the Sack of Rome, Volume II, A by Mandell Creighton (1843 – 1901)

Mandell Creighton’s history of the Papacy continues in Volume II with the condemnation in 1415 of Jan Hus by the Council of Constance and his death at the stake. His execution ignites civil war in Bohemia. Gregory XII abdicates as pope and the Council elects Oddone Colonna, Pope Martin V. The second Antipope John XXIII is eventually forced to resign, but the wily and stubborn Antipope, Benedict XIII, refuses to abdicate and flees to his native Spain, where he dies in 1423. The scene shifts to Basil, where a second Council has been convened to quell heresy in Bohemia and to reform the Church. Pope Eugenius IV, contesting its authority, undermines all its work. The volume closes with the Council of Florence, headed by the Pope, and attended by the Greek emperor and his chief prelates. Eugenius craves the glory of uniting, under the Pope, the Eastern and Western churches, but the Emperor just wants military aid to save Constantinople from the Turks.
(Summary by Pamela Nagami, M.D.)