Author:Martin Dorey
One of 'the best new books on eco-living' Sunday Times
Litter on our streets, plastics in our seas, overflowing landfill, fatbergs... Do you know where your rubbish ends up?
We are all responsible for the waste we make and we can make simple changes to live more planet-friendly lives.
Expert environmental campaigner Martin Dorey looks at what we recycle, what we bin, what we take to the tip - plastics, food, clothing, electricals and furniture - where it goes and what it really does to our planet.
Martin offers simple, impactful ways – #2minutesolutions – to cut down your waste and why they make a big difference.
You can help save the planet. It only takes 2 minutes.
Fascinating, hard to put down, and filled with powerful case histories. . . . the most important series of breakthroughs in mental health in the last thirty years
—— Norman Doidge, author of The Brain That Changes ItselfDr. van der Kolk's masterpiece combines the boundless curiosity of the scientist, the erudition of the scholar, and the passion of the truth teller
—— Judith Herman, M.D., author of Trauma and RecoveryA seminal book that outlines the author's pioneering work
—— Thea Jane May , VogueDraws on 30 years of experience to argue powerfully that trauma is one of the West's most urgent public health issues... Packed with science and human stories ... van der Kolk has a lot to say, and the struggle and resilience of his patients is very moving
—— New ScientistA gripping bestseller about where trauma goes, and its disastrous effects on both individuals and societies. Deeply interesting.
—— India Knight , TimesA masterpiece of powerful understanding and brave heartedness, one of the most intelligent and helpful works on trauma I have ever read. . . a brilliant synthesis of clinical cases, neuroscience, powerful tools and caring humanity, offering a whole new level of healing
—— Jack Kornfied, author of A Path With HeartIncredible
—— William Leith, 'Books of the Year' , Evening StandardEveryone should read this book
—— Nigella Lawson‘Cherry’ Ingram is a meticulously researched book: Abe undertook dozens of interviews with relatives of the sakuramori… [and] sifted through Ingram’s extensive diaries and condenses the often impenetrable history of Japan’s feudal and imperial ages
—— Alice Vincent , Daily TelegraphAfter reading [‘Cherry’ Ingram], the annual ritual of hanami (flower-viewing) will never be quite the same again… an extraordinary story
—— Richard Lloyd Parry , The TimesIn retelling [Ingram’s] story from her own cultural perspective, Abe has produced an engaging work that adds illuminating definition to the world about which he wrote
—— Jodie Jones , Gardens IllustratedAn enchanting story about an Englishman’s attempts to preserve Japan’s rich cherry tree heritage in the face of rapid modernization
—— Japan TimesAn admiring and engaging portrait of an eccentric British enthusiast, one of the last great amateur naturalists of the Edwardian Era
—— Laurence A. Marschall , Natural History MagazineRemarkable… Combining vast historical research, perceptive cultural interpretation, and a gift for keen, biographical storytelling, Abe’s study of one man’s passion for a singular plant species celebrates the beneficial impact such enthusiasts can have on the world at large
—— BooklistLovers of the outdoors, especially gardeners, will find much to enjoy in Japanese journalist Abe’s first English-language book, which won the Nihon Essayist Club Award in 2016. The author engagingly chronicles the travels and plant-collecting adventures of Collingwood Ingram… Charming
—— Kirkus ReviewLike the sakura itself, Ms. Abe’s book is a quiet pleasure
—— Gerard Helferich , Wall Street JournalInstead of looking at what we have done to the Earth, he examines what it has done to us, interweaving the physical and social sciences in a clear, logical and joyously entertaining way… [a] wonderful book
—— Gerard DeGroot , The Times, *Books of the Year*