While I gave this book a 5-star rating, it isn't because it was an entertaining read. The book is very well written and Alexander Clapp is an amazing journalist. What he uncovered during his two-year journey of following where all our garbage goes is absolutely shocking. Yet, should we really be surprised? We are all guilty when it comes to this problem, myself included. If you think you aren't, I ask you: do you own a cell phone? A computer? A TV, perhaps even more than one television? Do you use appliances that, unfortunately nowadays tend to break down within ten years? If you have, or had, children, do/did you use disposable diapers? Do you drink from and discard plastic water bottles? The list goes on. All of our disposable electronics, appliances, and cheap plastics, etc., are shipped overseas to be sold, burned, buried and so on, and the dangerous impact on our environment, and the health of the people who handle our toxic trash, is horrifying. Then there's the cruise ship dismantlers that I'd never heard of. It is such a dangerous job and the death toll from this extremely difficult and grueling task is just heart breaking. And when it comes to our trash, it isn't just the US that's shipping garbage to places like Ghana, Turkey, Java and other continents; China does, along with Germany, Great Britain, Canada, you get the picture. This is maddening. And what saddens me, is I checked this book out from my local library and I have been able to renew it three times. No one is placing any hold requests on it, unlike the fiction and mysteries I also enjoy reading. I am unable to renew them as there's a huge wait list for the new best sellers. Waste Wars should be an in demand book with a wait list too! And ironically, this book, like all the others I check out from the library, have PLASTIC protectors on the covers, something that gets thrown away when it gets beat up, torn, or whatever. How are we ever going to fix this world wide problem? No one is going to give up their cell phones, computers, and any of our other modern conveniences. My son works in IT and he said that most consumer laptops are designed to fail in five years. I miss the days when appliances, cars and electronics were built to actually last for 20+ years. Now we just throw these items away because in many cases, it's actually cheaper to buy a new replacement, or we just want the latest model. But the cost on our environment and fellow humankind is huge. And believe me, I'm not missing the irony here: I am able to post this review because I own a computer.