Garbage: A Costly American Addiction

Here's the latest on the Garbology front:

My guest blog post at Forbes "Garbage: A Costly American Addiction," takes a look at the hidden costs of the problem we roll to the curb each week and expect to vanish.

At the Wall Street Journal, my weekend essay is "Grappling with a Garbage Glut." Some very spirited comments have been going up there, too. Here's one observation I think is particularly on target:
What frustrates me about the garbage I produce is that the majority of it, I never wanted in the first place: redundant packaging materials and junk mail. If the environmentalists would shift their focus to guilting manufacturers away from this (instead of promoting the recycling after the fact), I can honestly say, my garbage output would be significantly reduced.

Atop Garbage Mountain

I spent the afternoon traipsing around Southern California's Garbage Mountain with a crew from CNN, who wanted to talk about Garbology and see the nation's biggest landfill first-hand.

Garbage Mountain didn't disappoint: It was a particularly appalling day of wasteful excess at the Puente Hills Landfill. We watched as enormous trucks dumped huge loads of perfectly good cabbages and other produce, stacks of couches and mattresses, and piles of cardboard boxes that could have been recycled as packs of seagulls swooped and shrieked overhead. "This doesn't even look like trash! Why are the throwing this away?" one of the crew members remarked.

The dump contains 130 million tons of garbage 500 feet tall. If Garbage Mountain were a high-rise, it would rank among LA's tallest skyscrapers -- overshadowing MGM Tower, Fox Plaza and Los Angeles City Hall. One unfortunate side effect of the recovering economy: the flow of trash is returning to its pre-recession heights at Garbage Mountain.

I was being interviewed and playing tour guide for an upcoming episode of  CNN's new environmental series, The Road to Rio. Stay tuned for more details.

Garbology Readers Guide, Events and More

In our lifetimes, each of us is on track to produce a whopping 102 tons of trash. (That's twice as much waste as we rolled to the curb in 1960.) How can we reduce those numbers and put America on a trash diet?

My new book, Garbology: Our Dirty Love Affair With Trash, which will be published by Penguin Books April 19, reveals what this world of trash looks like, how we we got there, and, best of all, what a growing number of families, communities and businesses are doing to find a way back from a world of waste.

Here are a few updates: 

Garbology on Facebook: Join the conversation at the new Garbology Page and be part of the solution. Share your best tips for a changing old (trashy) habits. How do you reuse, recycle and refuse?

Garbology Readers Guide: Here are 10 discussion questions for book clubs, classes and environmental groups.

Garbology Events: The program for the Los Angeles Times Festival of Books was announced today and I'm delighted to be participating in the Earth Day panel (Sunday April 22 at 12:30) entitled "Disposable Nation: Trash and Consequences." The panel is moderated by Madeline Brand (popular host at KPCC Public Radio) and also includes authors Kendra Pierre-Louis and Anna Sklar.

On Saturday April 28, I'll be speaking about the book at the Marina Pacifica Barnes & Noble in Long Beach. I'll be joined at 1 pm by Kim Masoner, founder of Save Our Beach, whose story is featured in Garbology, and who will be demonstrating how to crochet disposable plastic bags into bedrolls for the homeless. I hope you'll join us.

Garbology Media: Recent coverage includes Booklist (starred review), Library Journal, Kirkus, Book Forum, and The Why Files. Read more here. For press and other publicity inquiries, contact Beth Parker at Penguin Books.

6 Game-Changers: An Update

One thing I love about my work is how it allows me to meet, interview and write about newsmakers and game-changers -- people on the cutting edge of environmentalism, science, the law, energy, the arts and more. Over the course of 12 nonfiction books, I've met quite a few, and readers often ask me what's become of them. So here are updates on six reader favorites, people who have changed lives and the world:

Doug and Kris Tompkins, environmental philanthropists
In Eco Barons, I wrote about Doug Tompkins, the cofounder of Esprit who cashed out to become one of the world's leading environmental crusaders. With his wife, Kris McDivett Tompkins, former CEO of Patagonia, he has created a million acres of parks and preserves in the Patagonia region of Chile and Argentina. Update: These days the Tompkins are battling hydro-electric dams in one of the world's last big wild places, while completing South America's Yellowstone, Patagonia National Park. Here's an excerpt about Tompkins from Eco Barons.

Roosevelt Dorn, the judge who would be king
When I spent a year inside the LA Juvenile Court for No Matter How Loud I Shout, Judge Dorn was at the epicenter of a system overloaded, undermanned and at war with itself. With the booming voice of a old-school preacher and a pistol tucked inside his robes, Dorn saved kids. But he didn't mind bending the rules, and he left office a polarizing figure. When he became mayor of Inglewood, his fall from grace was spectacular, ending with a public corruption conviction, as reported in the LA Times. Here's an excerpt about Dorn from No Matter How Loud I Shout.

Arthur Penn, from GI Bill to Hollywood icon
Over Here: How the G.I. Bill Transformed the American Dream featured Penn, the director of such groundbreaking films as Bonnie and Clyde and The Miracle Worker (not to mention the televised Kennedy-Nixon debates). Penn credited his success on his experience at the experimental, arts-centric Black Mountain College. A veteran of the decisive World War II Battle of the Bulge, Penn told me he would likely never have gone to college without the GI Bill -- one of the many stories I recounted in Over Here. Penn has since passed away at age 88, but the G.I. Bill continues to aid new generations of veterans returning from Iraq and Afghanistan. BTW, a new ebook edition of Over Here is in the works.

Judge John E. Jones III and the new Scopes Trial
In Monkey Girl I chronicled a modern-day Scopes Monkey Trial, which ended with Judge Jones's ruling that a creationism offshoot known as intelligent design could not be taught alongside evolution in a public school science class.  Jones didn't stop making news with that controversial Kitzmiller v. Dover case, however. These days he's in the middle of another no-holds-barred fight with national implications, as he presides over a suit brought against the natural gas industry by Pennsylvanians who claim their water and health has been destroyed by a newly popular method of drilling called fracking. Here's an excerpt from Monkey Girl.

Roxanne Quimby, Burt's Bees and the Maine Woods
When I wrote about Quimby in Eco Barons, the founder of Burt's Bees (who built a fortune from a company originally based in a log cabin with no electricity) was busily preserving large swaths of the vast Maine Woods that long ago enraptured Henry David Thoreau. Update: Quimby is trying to donate much of the land she purchased in order to create a new national park in Maine. Not everyone in the state is thrilled, and the would-be gift has turned into a battle, according to Forbes.

Garbage In, Garbage Out - A Trashy Truth

Everyone thinks they know how much trash Americans throw away. The official EPA figure—used by environmentalists, businesses, and policymakers—maintains that the average American rolls just over 4.3 pounds to the curb every day. The problem: This "gold standard" of garbology is wildly wrong. Americans actually throw out more than 7 pounds a day, sending nearly twice as much waste to landfills as the EPA lets on.

Read the full story at Sierra Magazine


'Garbology' Galleys, First Review Are Here!

You know it's almost a book when the bound galleys thump on the doorstep. I really love the trashy montage Avery did with the cover of Garbology: Our Dirty Love Affair with Trash.

With the galleys comes the first review of Garbology, from the trade journal Kirkus. I'm happy to report the reviewer calls my upcoming narrative about the American way of waste -- and the families, businesses and communities who are finding a way back from it -- "surprising, even shocking" and "an important addition to the environmentalist bookshelf."

Garbology hits bookstores and e-tailers April 19, 2012. I plan on talking plenty of trash before then, so stay tuned.