Cronobacter in baby formula. Salmonella in chocolate. Listeria in lettuce. In a world where irrigation water is contaminated by run-off from cattle feedlots and where food processors cut corners, the food preparation skills we learned from our parents and grandparents are no longer good enough to keep us safe. Using a variety of foodborne disease outbreaks, often illustrated with the stories of individual victims, TAINTED explores the ways in which food becomes contaminated. Some of the stories–such as the deadly 1993 Jack in the Box outbreak–will be very familiar. Others will not. In this update to her 2007 book, Food Safety: Old Habits, New Perspectives , Phyllis Entis draws on nearly five decades of experience to explain how our regulatory systems have failed us, and to talk about what can be done to protect consumers from unsafe food. TAINTED...reads like a sci-fi thriller. Even the most unbelievable parts of the book are absolutely true. Phyllis Entis has researched a variety of food-borne disease outbreaks and often illustrated her findings with the stories of individual victims. Perhaps that is why this non-fiction book reads like a novel. - Author Iris Chacon. "Tainted" often reads like a true crime novel, where laymen and authorities uncover clues to save the public from future poisonings and reveal the culprits of past poisonings. - Food Safety News A graduate of McGill University and the University of Toronto, Phyllis Entis received her introduction to the field of food safety at the hands of Canada's Health Protection Branch, where she spent the first seven years of her professional life immersed in Salmonella, Staphylococcus, E. coli and other bad actors from the microbial world. Entis left government work to co-found (with her husband) QA Life Sciences, a company specializing in rapid testing methods for foodborne bacteria. For the next twenty-two years, she worked closely with representatives of Health Protection Branch, the US Food and Drug Administration and various state agencies to gain official sanction for the use of rapid testing methods in government and industry settings. Following the sale of QA Life Sciences, Entis became a freelance consultant and writer. Her first book, Food Microbiology - The Laboratory , was published in 2002 by the Food Processors Institute. It was followed five years later by Food Safety: Old Habits, New Perspectives , which was released by the American Society for Microbiology Press in January 2007. Since 2007, Entis has written about food safety issues for several publications, including Food Safety News , The Bark , and her own food safety blog, eFoodAlert . She has also found the time to write and release a 5-book mystery series, The Damien Dickens Mysteries . In TAINTED , Entis has combined her decades of experience with the story-telling skills honed during her career as a mystery writer to revamp and update the wealth of information contained in Old Habits and to produce a food safety narrative that is both educational and accessible.