Origin Notes
Aleri Review is an independent editorial publication based at 53 Hayne Street, London EC1A 9HB, United Kingdomrsistent low energy, sleep quality, and eating behaviour — drawing on published nutritional research and field observation.
53 Hayne Street, London EC1A 9HB, United Kingdom
What Aleri Review Documents
Aleri Review was established in London to fill a specific editorial gap: the relationship between low energy and body weight is a subject of sustained popular interest but irregular editorial quality. Coverage of this subject tends toward either specialist detachment or sensationalised simplification. Aleri Review occupies neither end of that spectrum.
The publication documents the subject through observation-based field writing and engagement with published nutritional and rest science research. Its editorial position is that the relationship between fatigue, eating behaviour, and body composition is worth examining at the level of detail that ordinary life actually operates — the 14:30 reach for something sweet, the evening when portion tracking fails, the weekend when the sleep schedule shifts.
Aleri Review is an independent editorial publication focused on everyday wellness practices. The publication is not affiliated with any commercial, governmental, or institutional body.
Articles published in Aleri Review are editorial in nature and reflect the writers' observations on everyday wellness practices. The content is not intended as professional advice, nor as guidance for the management of any specific condition. Readers with specific concerns about their daily routines are encouraged to speak with a qualified wellness professional.
The Team
Eleanor Marsden writes on everyday wellness practices and observation-based nutritional research. She founded Aleri Review to document the less-examined details of how low energy shapes daily eating behaviour. Her field notes from the London observation period form the editorial core of the publication's first volume.
Read her work →
Tobias Whitfield writes on rest science, circadian patterns, and their relationship to eating behaviour. He brings a documentary-factual register to subjects that are often presented in abstract terms — translating the structural mechanics of rest cycles into accounts that reflect how they are actually experienced in a working week.
Read his work →
Harriet Linwood is a guest contributor whose work examines circadian patterns and their relationship to eating behaviour. Her contribution to the first volume — the afternoon slump piece — draws on original observation data compiled across a twelve-week period and represents the kind of field-grounded writing the publication was built to publish.
Read her work →How We Work
Aleri Review operates under the following editorial principles: articles are reviewed by at least one second editor before publication, sources are cited where appropriate, corrections are noted publicly, and writers disclose any relationship that could influence their selection of subject matter.
The publication selects content based on published nutritional research and undergoes independent batch verification for quality and labelling accuracy. Field observation periods run for a minimum of four weeks per article subject. All contributing writers work under the publication's editorial standards, which are documented in full on the Methodology page.
Editorial Methodology →
53 Hayne Street, London EC1A 9HB, United Kingdom
Correspondence & Pitches
Reader correspondence, editorial queries, and contribution proposals are welcomed. Writers with field observation experience in rest science, circadian patterns, or eating behaviour are particularly encouraged to reach out.
Contact the Editors