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Paperback The Virtuous Consumer: Your Essential Shopping Guide for a Better, Kinder, Healthier World Book

ISBN: 1930722745

ISBN13: 9781930722743

The Virtuous Consumer: Your Essential Shopping Guide for a Better, Kinder, Healthier World

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Format: Paperback

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Book Overview

Is laminate flooring good or bad? Should one buy beverages in plastic bottles or cans? And how can one crack the code of little numbers in triangles on the bottom of plastic containers? Virtuous Consumer is for busy people who want to buy responsibly but are not sure where to start. There's surprisingly little useful information available, so in this book Leslie Garrett provides the answers to commonly asked questions. Each chapter in this...

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Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Informative and funny.

My boyfriend bought this book for me and I've since bought 5 copies that I have passed on to friends! It is VERY informative and makes you aware of why you should and should not use certain products. While it makes you concerned about our future, it doesn't have too much of an alarmist attitude and throws in HILARIOUS comic relief. I LOVE Leslie Garrett's tone!

Good Idea that Whimpers to an End

Halfway through the book I wrote "superb, clear-cut," and then the book whimpered to an end. This is a very good idea, it was offered for sale at Bioneers 2007, so I have left it at four stars in part because of that and in part because I liked the specifications of brands that made the grade. The book consists of 11 short parts with the first six being fairly robust and useful, and the last five whimpering to an end, rather pedestrian and not as illuminating or diverse as the earlier sections. 1) PERSONAL: Cosmetics, tampons and pads, sex toys, all toxic if you buy the wrong brands. Woman's pee going into the oceans with artificial estrogen lowering the sperm count of ocean animals (this at the same time that human male sperm count is nose-diving for varied other reasons). 2) ECO-CHIC covers clothing and does a good job of outlining vitual water, sweatshop costs, and (new to me) the dry cleaning implications when wash and wear is not the default option. Similarly, jewlery is rife with blood diamonds and so on, new to me was the integrity of Canadian jewlery, the value of synthetic, and used jewlery. 3) FOOD advises among many other things to avoid farm fish (I would add, avoid Wal-Wart fish as their practices are destroying the South Pacific), be conscious of genetic and pesticide hand-me-downs (arsenic in fast food chicken from the feed seeking to kill worms in the chickens). Pays tribute to the "slow food" movement (something my wife and I are designing the new kitchen toward, inspired by the week I spent in a French country kitchen in Provance). 4) KIDS, avoid plastic, plastic, plastic. I was very surprised to learn about the relatively toxic nature of most plastic. I knew about the arsenic in the old wood playground sets. Wood toys recommended, used toys recommended. Excellent emphasis on how asthma in kids is sky-rocketing (and I would add, especially in low income neighborhoods with little green and excessive idling trucks) from pollution. Good emphasis on how many countries are forbidding advertising toward children. 5) CLEAN LIVING focuses on the relative toxicity of specific cleaners, many of which increase the oil in the water downstream. Suggests that one read and sort all items by the relative danger warnings on the labels, cut use fo detergent in half, buy a front loader washer for dramatic energy and water savings. Encourages the washing and re-use of zip lock bags, the elmination of seran wrap (and my wife told me tonight, now known to transfer toxicity to food when used in the microwave). Recommends trash triage, home compost hear. Useful pointer to web site 41pounds.org where for $41 a year, they will do all the work needed to eliminate all jumk mail (I sealed my office mail address and got a post box, achieved the same effect but at a higher cost). As with most Bioneers, the book is very strongly against buying water in plastic bottles, pointing out that most such water is tap water, and that the plastic bo

Virtuous Consumer 07

I love this book! I wanted to get back into being eco-conscious (fell out during those wild years of college in the mid-90s, I'm so ashamed) and this book was a wonderful jumping off point. Sections on clothes, cosmetics, house products, kids, cars, gardening, etc. are thorough and fun to read. I will use it as a reference forever! In fact, I'll re-read it before I get pregnant and before I buy a house. While I want to buy another copy of this book to inspire my not-so-eco-conscious but very pregnant cousin, my granola brother would find it too basic. That is NOT to say it is armchair environmentalism. Ms. Garrett is serious about being green in every way she can be without disengaging from popular culture: she has switched to a green power provider and composts, etc. And while she may not be 100%, her quest is inspirational. I just hope she updates every few years because I want to know more places to turn to for products and ideas. I also bought and recommend "Clean House, Clean Planet" by Logan and "Living Green" by Horn.

The Virtuous Consumer

I think that many of us believe that we are doing our part to preserve our world for our children and grandchildren. We happily recycle what we can. We donate our old clothes to good will. We enjoy local foods and even buy organic sometimes. The Virtuous Consumer shows the consumer that there is so much more that we could be doing. This book examines better options in every single consumer category from food and clothing through energy consumption and pesticide free gardening to adopting a pet and buying a car. Reading this information for me was rather eye opening. I really hadn't thought about how my pads and tampons were adding to the landfills. I had never even considered that there might be other options. Likewise, I had never spent even a single moment thinking about the pesticides used to grow my cotton clothing, what my laminate flooring was really made of, or the chemical composition of my children's toys. The Virtuous Consumer is an interesting read. I don't see myself following the author's guidelines to the letter or worrying about how every purchase I make effects the world. However, I did find a handful of things that I could conceivable do within my regular routine and a few new products that I'd like to check out. I am also armed with a little more information that will likely affect my buying practices and choices.

Great book

Leslie Garrett is a fantastic writer who has managed to break through the confusing world of how to act in an eco friendly world, while acknowledging that being perfect at it all the time just isn't going to happen. With personal and funny anecdotes, great references, research, and an easy to read style, you won't be able to put it down...and you will change some of your ways. She has a gentle way of convincing without preaching - even to the Hummer driving, bottled water drinking crowd.
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