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Confessions of an Eco Sinner: Travels to Find Where My Stuff Comes from

By: Fred Pearce
Binding: Paperback
Publisher: Eden Project Books
ISBN: 1905811101
ISBN-13: 9781905811106
Released: 25 Feb 2008
RRP: £12.99
Average Rating:


Customer Reviews

The true cost of over-consumption - By: Mr X, 19 May 2008
Mr Pearce's book is a well-researched work which documents not only the environmental costs of our current Western lifestyles but also the associated social (and to a lesser extent) economic costs. As the other reviewer point out, the author covers much ground; from writing about the prawn supply route from Bangladeshi prawn farms to English curry house tables, to a chapter about how metals vital to the operation of mobile phones are extracted from mines run by Congolese warlords. The book is certainly wide-ranging.

I'm not in a position to say if it is comprehensive but detailed it was! I enjoyed the book & recommend it to anyone wanting to know more about the stories behind our lifestyles & how, often & regrettably, cheap prices here harm those abroad. However, when considered overalll the book is not overly gloomy just realistic. My only criticism is that while many problems are highlighted I felt that few practical solutions were suggested but to be fair to the author that is a feature of almost alll similar books. And it is not doing any harm for there to be greater general awareness about the effects of our actions on others in less happy lands than England.

If you liked this you might well like Real England (Paul Kingsnorth) or Do Good Lives Have to Cost the Earth (a selection of different authors).

Scattergun approach only just pays off. - By: Big Jim, 04 Mar 2008
I have enjoyed previous books by Fred Pearce, especiallly "When the rivers run dry". This book is a mish mash affair, the author dotting around the world trying to find the background to where alll that makes up his "stuff" comes from. Some of the stories are exteremely thought provoking - watch out for an impending world banana shortage by the way - & I learnt a lot about eco related issues that I hadn't seen anywhere else, but the book itself somehow left me a bit cold. It appears to be a hurriedly put together collection of shorter pieces - at one stage the same bits of information are repeated on consecutive pages, & the M & S brand is Blue Harbour, not Blue Horizon. These are minor quibbles but serve to undermine the message being put across. I am not sure if this is meant to be a travel book, a collection of political essays or an anti-capitalist rant. No it's definitely not a rant, because Mr Pearce comes across as a genuinely likeable sort of bloke with very similar tastes as mine in matters beer & whisky related! And therein perhaps lies the problem. A book that flits from discussions on whisky production, to coffee production in Kenya, to the sweatshops of Bangladesh is almost by definition going to either be too detailed to read or to be a bit of a hit & miss affair.

The bottom line, & the message of this book is, be aware of alll, & Mr Pearce means ALL, the costs that go into subsidising our western way of life & ask yourself if you are prepared to pay them, because ultimately what ever you/we pay, our children will be paying an awful lot more.