Secondhand: Travels in the New Global Garage Sale
A**O
Fascinating, very good writer
Love this whole topic, we should all read this if we are taking things to Goodwill, buying things, or just plain interested in the planet and how "stuff" goes around. Thank you Mr. Minter
S**R
A worthwhile book to read if you want to know sth about garage sales in N. America
Wished to learn about the importance of garage sales in N. America
S**N
A great informative read for anyone who is interested in second hand things.
This book is so interesting, I am a big fan of second hand items, I donate and buy items regularly. This book is quite shocking, makes you think about stuff in a different way. For British readers, the author has examples from America and other countries, but does not mention our second hand market. There are highs - people buying, fixing and reusing and re-homing things and the lows - landfill items, cannot be recycled. I would definitely read other books by this author.
L**R
Amusing, terrifying, inspiring, infuriating and depressing
I'm recycling some of my review of Minter's first book: Junkyard Planet: Travels in the Billion-Dollar Trash Trade to write this review ♥. Secondhand: Travels in the New Global Garage Sale by Adam Minter is amusing, terrifying, inspiring, infuriating and depressing. Not the book itself, which is wonderful: Minter is an accomplished journalist with a unique understanding of his subject matter - junkyards, scrapyards, recycling, reuse, secondhand throughout the world - because he grew up in his family's Minneapolis, Minnesota, US scrapyard. All those other adjectives because Secondhand so compellingly exposes the worst of capitalist excess. Western cultures WASTE resources on an immeasurable scale, and maintain an enraging, ill-informed insistence that Western solutions to global challenges, which often truthfully are generated and propelled by Western societies in the first place, are the only appropriate ones. In a trash can, Western cultures, and a growing number of cultures influenced by Western values, use too many original raw resources to sustain rational levels of production and consumption before the unhealthful consequences to the Earth's ecosystem may be irreversible. There are countermeasures, but governments often lack the will to implement them, and too few manufacturers are willing to make them profitable. That planned obsolescence, which I railed against in another post, is somehow considered wholesome is obscene. There are promising signs of change - "right to repair" laws, for example, are becoming more common. Right-to-repair movements work against legislation which enforces corporate profiteering concerning voided warranties. But it's disheartening that what was once ironclad common sense now has to be litigated.So I'm almost afraid to talk about this book where my clients might read it! Because my awesome, engaged, conscientious, forward-thinking clients are going to take this book to heart. Too many of them already do too much, paralyzing themselves in their efforts to recycle and reuse responsibly. I frequently remind my clients that they are probably sooooooo far ahead of most people who don't care, my clients can slack off for several years and still not fall behind! Taking care of yourself is a way of taking care of the environment.Lauren Williams, Casual Uncluttering LLC, Woodinville, WA USA
K**E
It’s a book I will read till the end.
I’m not finished reading it yet, but so far it’s keeping me interested, it’s informative and well written.
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