Garbology: Our Dirty Love Affair with Trash
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A Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist takes readers on a surprising tour of America’s biggest export, our most prodigious product, and our greatest legacy: our trash
The average American produces 102 tons of garbage across a lifetime and $50 billion in squandered riches are rolled to the curb each year. But our bins are just the starting point for a strange, impressive, mysterious, and costly journey that may also represent the greatest untapped opportunity of the century.
In Garbology, Edward Humes investigates trash—what’s in it; how much we pay for it; how we manage to create so much of it; and how some families, communities, and even nations are finding a way back from waste to discover a new kind of prosperity. Along the way, he introduces a collection of garbage denizens unlike anyone you’ve ever met: the trash-tracking detectives of MIT, the bulldozer-driving sanitation workers building Los Angeles’ Garbage Mountain landfill, the artists residing in San Francisco’s dump, and the family whose annual trash output fills not a dumpster or a trash can, but a single mason jar.
Garbology reveals not just what we throw away, but who we are and where our society is headed. Waste is the one environmental and economic harm that ordinary working Americans have the power to change—and prosper in the process.
Garbology is raising awareness of trash consumption and is sparking community-wide action through One City One Book programs around the country. It is becoming an increasingly popular addition to high school and college syllabi and is being adopted by many colleges and universities for First Year Experience programs.
Publisher : Avery; Reprint edition (March 5, 2013)
Language : English
Paperback : 336 pages
ISBN-10 : 1583335234
ISBN-13 : 978-1583335239
Item Weight : 8.8 ounces
Dimensions : 5.19 x 0.88 x 7.94 inches
Customers say
Customers find the book easy to read and informative. They find it enlightening and engaging, with relevant information about waste management. The book is well-researched and covers the facts and figures in a meaningful way. Readers appreciate the pacing and humor.
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7 reviews for Garbology: Our Dirty Love Affair with Trash
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Original price was: $ 18.00.$ 13.50Current price is: $ 13.50.
C. Ash –
A Good Read for a Sad Topic
I encountered this book by chance when part of the NPR interview of Edward Humes, author of Garbology: Our Dirty Love Affair with Trash caught my attention.In the interview, Humes was talking about Bakelite, an early plastic that was used for billiard balls, piano keys, and telephones — things that were meant to be durable, and have long, even heirloom-length, lives. He was calm and reasoned, not casting blame but describing a shift in the way materials are used as being problematic. It was impersonal, informative, and assumed intelligence from the audience.Humes opens the book with an anecdote of elderly hoarders, Jesse & Thelma Gaston, who had been trapped in their own home, by their own trash, for three weeks. He moves further into the story of trash by describing other hoarders, the condition of hoarding, and the media attention it has received in the last few years. His punchline is startling:”But little if any thought is given to the refuse itself, or to the rather scarier question of how any person, hoarder or not, can possibly generate so much trash so quickly.Of course, there’s a reason for this blind spot: namely, the amount of junk, trash, and waste that hoarders generate is perfectly, horrifyingly normal. It’s just that most of us hoard it in landfills instead of living rooms, so we never see the truly epic quantities of stuff that we all discard. But make no mistake: The two or three years it took the Gastons to fill their house with five to six tons of trash is typical for an American couple.” (page 3/location 106)He follows this assertion with a discussion of how much trash the average American generates daily, coming up with an average lifetime production of 102 tons of trash. There is a reasonably detailed discussion of how one estimates that amount, and multiple illustrations for how much 102 tons really is. Aircraft carriers are involved. Which is kind of scary, when you are talking about one person’s trash.Humes then poses three questions: What is the nature and cost of that 102-ton monument of waste? How is it possible for people to create so much waste without intending to do so, or even realize they are doing it? Is there a way back from the 102-ton legacy, and what would that do for us… or to us? (pages 11-12) These three questions form the organizing principles of the book.Part 1: The Biggest Thing We Make describes how America deals with trash, how it has been dealt with in the past, and some “paths not taken” in the history of American waste management. He talks about the concept of waste and wastefulness, how our natural sense of thrift was overcome by early mid-century advertisers (fans of Mad Men might find this familiar territory), and how the political climate defeats promising policies. The Great Pacific Garbage Patch is discussed in (rather depressing) detail. Humes corrected my misconception, a common one, he asserts, that the Garbage Patch (not to mention the other gyres collecting plastic trash in the other oceans) is not an “island” of trash, but a chowder of plastic bits with floating detergent bottles and milk cartons and old toys floating around what ought to be a pristine blue surface thousands of miles from anywhere.Part 2: The Trash Detectives was perhaps the most depressing section of the book. It’s the shortest, because it’s the area involving the greatest number of unknowns. It goes against what we might assume, that “someone out there” knows what happens to the cans we put in the recycling, or the printer cartridges that we drop off at Office Depot, but in fact there is not really a clear, readily followable chain for where stuff goes when we’re done with it (except the landfill) as there is for how to get it into our hands. Humes does a great job of detailing exactly what is and is not known about trash after its useful life, and although the information itself is depressing, his prose never is. It’s informative and occasionally incredulous, but always readable and factual; he is one of us, which is to say, he doesn’t exempt himself from the problem.Part 3: The Way Back was… maybe not so much empowering, given how thoroughly Humes detailed the scope of the problems our trash poses, but certainly hopeful. “Pick of the Litter” details a San Francisco dump and artist-in-residence program that talks about how much is found in the dump, but also how much potential there is for the stuff in there as actual materials. “Chico and the Man” recounts the efforts of a small entrepreneur to create a new kind of reusable shopping bag, and to educate people on the environmental benefits of avoiding plastic shopping bags — and the gigantic lawsuit that was mounted against him by the plastic bag industry — and how it was defeated. The remainder of the section talks about the efforts communities around the world and one Marin County, California family of four has been working to reduce their waste, one innovative idea at a time.If you’re interested in treading lightly on the Earth, this book will be interesting and informative. If you’ve never thought about it before, it’s a reasonable place to start; Humes makes a very good case for remaking ourselves into a less wasteful culture as being good for us personally, as well: with less stuff, and better stuff, we can do more, save more, be financially more secure and nationally more secure. The materials we have in our landfills are resources we’ve paid for and then discarded as though they are valueless. Humes makes a powerfully readable case for the value of our resources, and for renewing our natural tendency to thrift.
Aaron –
Interesting, Comprehensive, and Relevant
I truly enjoyed ‘Garbology,’ as to grant it the rare five stars.It is, in my opinion, well-written as a piece of literature, with a good, easy-to-read format. Plus, the author manages to inject some humor and personality into the text, managing to avoid the wooden academic tone of many such books (and, to help lighten the often-somber subject matter). Likewise, the book is comprehensive, researched, and diverse, as to present sound arguments for the author’s theories and conclusions (which, I might add, are largely neutral, objective, and unbiased, to a commendable degree). For these reasons, I consider ‘Garbology’ to be, from a purely literary perspective, valid and respectable.In terms of substance and overall value, ‘Garbology’ is, in my opinion, equally successful. The book covers a lot of territory in its relatively short length, and all of it was, for me, highly interesting and engaging. Indeed, we are sufficiently informed about the present state of the garbage crisis, and from many different angles; however, there is, by extension, a whole other dimension to the text’s exploration of these issues. By examining the overt topic and its asides, we are treated to an overview of the human experience in general, touching on everything from the political to the social to the historical to the cosmic, with psychological studies throughout — a veritable smorgasbord of food-for-thought (and none of it unappetizing, so to speak). Lessons abound (and all from a discussion of trash, no less); but, if nothing else, ‘Garbology’ serves as the perfect object lesson in there being consequences of our actions, as perhaps nothing else could be. For this reason alone, the book is, I believe, an important read for just about anyone, its other qualities notwithstanding.If I had to list a negative, it would be that ‘Garbology’ at times relies a bit too heavily on statistics and similarly one-dimensional data to make its case (or so I read it as, anyhow). Though, this was a minor point, and it failed, ultimately, to detract from the book’s overall thrust.In the end, I finished ‘Garbology’ feeling informed and enriched. Good stuff.My sincere thanks goes out to this book’s author, subjects, and publisher. I am grateful for, and have benefited from, your work and service.
Loril Shannik –
Book was in good shape as advertised and arrived on schedule.
Ms Hickman –
Yes, a bit stodgy in patches, but a compreshensive journey from the 50s to present day. A good read for the layman to find out how we got to here – thanks, Mr Eisenhower! It is powerful, and (mostly) readable it will spike the reader to find out more, do more, about the terrible scourge of modern life…. Plastic, in all it’s forms. It can even prompt an MSc dissertation topic – it did for me!
K.SAVITHA –
a real good one.lots of relevant and interesting information and also easy to read.
mike –
Came in perfect condition.
G. Bridey –
Garbology: Our Dirty Love Affair with TrashWritten from a U.S. perspective and in a somewhat ponderous style, this book is of most interest to non-U.S. readers when it details some of the frightening statistics of the global garbage scene — especially of the threat posed by the careless disposal of the plastics we use in everyday life. An interesting insight, also, into the way in which powerful interest groups can succeed in negating proposals to combat the threat posed by irresponsibledisposal of waste materials.