Hi Ashley
I HAVE, in fact, read several Atkins books. I certainly thank him for leading the LC revolution and standing up for it over 40 years ago. He was a man ahead of his time.
I also tried Atkins last Fall and GAINED WEIGHT! Not the deit's fault of course. I was taking online grad classes, had a VERY stressful semester at work (I currently teach college level classes as well as take them) and ate all kinds of weird stuff. I say weird because if you read Atkins induction, it does not allow foods like LC yogurt, nuts, or LC breads. Then you're supposed to add back in 5 carb increments until you hit some personal level for losing.
Like Ann said, what some people don't realize is their levels are probably rather low and should stay that way until they lose. All I know is that the whole thing kind of messed my head up and I just gave up after gaining about 20 pound (combination of factors including stress and inactivity, not just Atkins).
Enter Fat To Skinny.... I actually bought the book a few years ago and would revisit it from time to time and I thought Doug's eating ideas were really good, but I never really tried it. I did try it early this winter and people started telling me I looked thinner. Well, I freaked out and didn't wait for my body to make the switch to a fat burner and gave up too soon. But, I'm back now!
What FTS does that Atkins doesn't is it greatly simplifies the process. No food ladder, no increasing increments, no calorie counting....just keeping carbs at 20 net or below and you're good.
Eating this way is SUPER POWERFUL for me. I can walk away from baked goods like they're dog doo-doo and I can literally go for HOURS without needing food. I don't starve myself either and I don't have to count calories like I have an eating disorder. I just eat things my body like (which are low carb), make sure I stay at or below 20 carbs, and I listen to my body and that's it. It's taken me a while to trust the simplicity of the system. After years of counting calories, points, portions, cards, percentages, pieces, sections, and anything else you can quantify, I now just have one number to worry about. I think the simplicity kind of scared me for a while there (I do like to analyze and think about things).
This WOE gives me peace. Weird, I know, but having stable blood sugar helps me feel more peaceful, which is amazing.