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February 22, 2011 / Leslie

Review: The Story of Stuff

The Story of StuffThe Story of Stuff
The Impact of Overconsumption on the Planet, Our Communities, and Our Health-And How We Can Make It Better
by Annie Leonard

Genre: Non-Fiction
Publisher: Simon & Schuster Free Press
Publish Date: February 22, 2011
Format: Paperback | 368 pages
Rating: 4 of 5

Americans live in a consumer society. We are constantly bombarded by advertising and encouraged to buy more and more. Purchasing something new is supposed to make us happy. We are even told it’s patriotic to shop, spend money, get the economy moving. But how many of us ever think about what it takes to produce all this stuff and ship it to stores or our homes and then haul it off to the dump to dispose of it when we are done with it. After reading The Story of Stuff, it’s difficult to look at ‘stuff’ the same way again.

I consider myself a green person. I reduce, reuse, recycle, conserve energy, grow my own veggies, compost everything I can and generally try to be a good citizen of the planet. After reading this book I have learned there is much more to the life cycle of a product than most of us ever realize. The author takes us through the five stages with a chapter on each: Extraction, Production, Distribution, Consumption and Disposal. Each stage consumes resources and creates pollution, and not just here in the US but around the world.

An eye-opener for me was learning that while recycling is good it’s not the solution. We are consuming resources faster than the planet can replenish them. The problem is excessive consumption. The author found that when she asked, “Are we consuming too much?”, it was not a very popular question. Our economy now depends on consumption at an ever accelerating rate.

As consumers we’ve become resigned to the fact that our stuff is disposable. It wasn’t always this way. Things used to last years and years. Now they are designed with planned obsolescence and fall apart quickly and cannot be repaired. That particularly resonated with me. A few months ago my printer stopped working. This was a perfectly good printer that I really liked and I wanted to get it repaired. Seems simple enough, right? Wrong. The cost to fix it was almost as much as buying a new one. I did some research and in the end I opted to fix it anyway because the ink cartridges it uses are half the cost of the newer models plus this kept my printer out of the landfill. All too often it doesn’t work out this way and the item ends up in the dump.

The Story of Stuff is a wealth of information and knowledge on the hidden costs of consumerism and what we can do to make it better. The author presents the facts without being preachy and writes in a humorous and engaging style. Ultimately we have to ask ourselves, does buying more and more stuff make us happier?

Watch The Story of Stuff online movie on YouTube.

Visit The Story of Stuff webpage.

About the Author

Annie Leonard has spent nearly two decades investigating and organizing on environmental health and justice issues. She has traveled to 40 countries, visiting literally hundreds of factories where our stuff is made and dumps where our stuff is dumped. Witnessing first hand the horrendous impacts of both over- and under- consumption around the world, Annie is fiercely dedicated to reclaiming and transforming our industrial and economic systems so they serve, rather than undermine, ecological sustainability and social equity.
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A copy of this book was provided by the publisher for review as part of The Free Press Blog Tour.

The Story of Stuff was printed on recycled paper.

4 Comments

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  1. Rebecca Rasmussen / Feb 22 2011 7:48 am
    Rebecca Rasmussen's avatar

    This sounds very interesting — especially because Ava and I were behind a garbage truck yesterday for about twenty minutes and we had a long conversation about where stuff goes.

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  2. bermudaonion / Feb 22 2011 1:19 pm
    BermudaOnion's avatar

    I try to be eco-friendly too, but your review has got me wondering just how eco-friendly I am.

    Like

  3. Suko / Feb 22 2011 5:23 pm
    Suko's avatar

    This sounds like quite an eye-opening book. I also reduce, reuse, and recycle, and try to be “green” as much as possible, but I am sure that I would learn a great deal from this book. Excellent review.

    Like

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