You are on page 1of 1

Reading

Group Guide
1. What surprised you most in reading Garbology and how does that connect with your life? 2. What could people learn about you from your trash? 3. When people talk about trash solutions, most focus on recycling. But Bea Johnson, of the Zero Waste Home blog, focuses on refusing as in refusing to let plastic, party favors and excess packaging in her home in the Nirst place. What do you think about this idea? 4. Author Edward Humes reveals that our nations biggest export is our trash, and that our waste is far greater than many government and industry experts realize -- 102 tons per person in a lifetime. Can you think of better solutions than building Garbage Mountains like the one described at the start of the book? 5. Garbology details the growing problem of plastic ocean pollution as a threat to sea life and our food supply. Responses include community beach cleanups and plastic bag bans in a growing number of cities. What more should we do? 6. Kim Masoner, founder of Save Our Beach in Seal Beach, Calif., crochets plastic bags into bedrolls for the homeless. San Franciscos dump has 3 resident artists making trash into art. What are your ideas for turning trash into treasure? 7. Andy Keller, founder of Chico Bags, calls plastic bags the gateway drug to wastefulness. Whats your relationship with plastic and disposable plastic bags? 8. Could you (do you) get by without plastic bags? Other disposables? 9. What are people doing in your community to reduce waste? Does your town offer guidelines for recycling? Collect green waste separately? Encourage composting? 10. It may not be possible to live truly waste-free. But we all can do better -- and save a boatload of money -- if we make it a priority to gradually change wasteful habits. What simple, practical habits can you change in your home that would reduce your 102-ton garbage footprint?

GARBOLOGY
Our Dirty Love Affair With Trash

Edward Humes
Avery Books/Penguin USA

Edward Humes is the Pulitzer Prize-winning author of twelve nonNiction books, including No Matter How Loud I Shout: A Year in the Life of Juvenile Court; Monkey Girl; Eco Barons; and Force of Nature: The Unlikely Story of Wal-Marts Green Revolution. For more on Eds work, or to arrange a live book club chat via Skype, please visit his website, www.EdwardHumes.com, or email shout@edwardhumes.com.

You might also like