I bought this book, probably a couple of years ago now, when I was browsing a local non-profit book store. It sat on my shelf for a long time before I found the concentration to sit down & read it (thanks quarantine). When I picked this book up I was already aware of the plastic pollution our world has. I had come across Lauren Singer (& the zero waste movement) awhile back on social media & found that there was, even more, I could do for Mother Earth.
I've been a vegetarian since February of 2015, which was a decision I made on a whim. I just remember thinking one day that I didn't want to eat meat anymore & I went cold turkey. lol, get it? Of course, since I live at home, it had some ripple effects but I buy my own food now. (I hope to one day become vegan & I'm almost there, I just haven't made that last step yet.) Also for the last 2 years, I've bought most of my clothing secondhand (except for some things). But like I said earlier, Life Without Plastic gave me even more than that.
I jokingly told my family that Life Without Plastic was like my holy grail. I want to live the most eco-friendly, sustainable lifestyle that helps nature not hurts it. I'd already begun that journey five years ago, & I've steadily made more progress each year. This book opened my eyes to things I hadn't even thought about. Like who knew that most of the items used to build your house, from your floor to your refrigerator, were made up of plastic or something similarily toxic? (Okay, maybe you knew, but I was shocked.) I already knew plastics were bad but I didn't really know why or how they were. So this book gave the information & facts on everything I could know. I can't even tell you how many things I wanted to highlight or write simply because it was interesting or it was something I had never heard of (but I didn't for the sake of the next owner of the book).
Life Without Plastic continuously gives you information & facts (backed up with a lot of sources) throughout the entire book. It breaks down everything about plastic from the different kinds there are to the hormone-disrupting chemicals, plasticizers, types of bisphenol, etc in them. It gives you a step by step plan to analyze your own home & see just how much plastic you really have in your life. And then it goes on to show you how to make simple, small changes (a reusable water bottle or straw) to much bigger changes (what kind of energy your house runs on). It even gives you the resources at the end to make those changes with companies listed that strive to sell items plastic-free. It also gives you other books, documentaries, & people that can increase our knowledge of a happy, plastic-free lifestyle.
This is going to become one of those books that I constantly pick up; something that I'm going to keep close to me for a long time because it'll help me live the life I want to live. I would give it more than 5 stars if I could but my opinion is bias.