I really liked Schaub's previous books, Year of No Sugar and Year of No Clutter, so I was excited to see a new "year of" book from her. And while Schaub is a great writer and obviously very dedicated to her causes, this was a downer of a book to read. Of course Schaub starts out the Year of No Garbage in 2020, not knowing what was to come with COVID-19. And I do feel like she just barely mentioned all the extra garbage created from COVID - disposable masks, gloves, takeout food containers, single-use everything, so many cleaning products it's a wonder we're all alive, etc. Basically the book turned into the evils of plastic and that was the bane of the Year of No Garbage. Not that I'm saying plastic is good, but to basically find out that recycling plastic is impossible was hard to read about - just very discouraging. And Schaub was EXTREMELY hardcore - hand-washing all kinds of plastics and holding on to them hoping to find a way for them to be recycled - almost no one would go to those lengths. Plus, the other downside to this book was that a lot of the stuff she did would be out of financial reach for most people - from paying for special recycling boxes for hard-to-recycle goods, buying a bidet, and shopping almost exclusively from small, health food stores - these are not things the average person can afford to do regularly. I'm not saying we shouldn't all try to reduce our plastic use, but she seemed to have a lot of money to throw at this issue. I did learn some things that I will use now - specifically battery recycling and the plastic bag recycling bins at grocery stores can take more than just plastic grocery bags. Overall, if you want to read about the evils of plastic and how they will NEVER GO AWAY - this is the book for you. Just be prepared to be depressed at the end.
Some quotes I liked:
"But part of my objective in doing a year-long project is not just to demonstrate how hard it may be to live in a way that's different from our cultural norm, but also to ask the questions: Why is this so hard? Should it be? Are there good reasons to rethink things we have till now accepted? (p. 6)
"Worldwide, the pandemic is estimated to have generated somewhere between eight and eleven million tons of additional plastic waste." (p. 81)
"I was coming to realize something. Recycling in this country isn't supposed to actually work. Recycling is broken. And maybe, just maybe, companies like it that way...There simply isn't enough of a standardized approach in this country to make recycling work in any real, effective, and comprehensible way. Instead, we're just supposed to think it works, so we keep buying the products made with materials we as a society don't know what to do with. Shut up and buy stuff! (p. 101-102)
"I've heard it called 'consumerist environmentalism,' and it hearkens back to my frustration with all the glass and aluminum straws that come with their own carrying cases. To be clear: I don't think there's anything wrong with buying a beautiful object if you love it and it will bring you a little bit of aesthetic joy every time you use it, especially if it avoids the use of the ever-problematic plastic. But there's a lot of stuff out there masquerading as useful and sustainable, when it's really just more stuff." (p. 130)
"So when you hear about 'plastics recycling,' we probably shouldn't picture shiny new food containers. Instead, maybe we should picture plastic being melted, ground up into chips and then reinserted into our environments to degrade further, shedding toxic, chemical-laden microplastics that flow into our ground and water supply...That's not even the worst part. The very worst part is that the plastics industry has known this all along....industry documents from as far back as the early seventies describing large-scale plastic recycling as unfeasible." (p. 166-67)
"I was abjectly terrified by this brand-new idea: the idea that we modern humans were playing with chemistry and don't fully know what we are doing, or understand the potential ramifications." (p. 191) [this could apply to food, chemicals, medicine, almost anything...]