Free: Adventures on the margins of a wasteful society
3 journalers for this copy...
Free
Adventures on the margins of a wasteful society
By: Katharine Hibbert
What happens when you walk away from everything that you think you can't live without?
For many the daily grind can feel like a trap - work, gym, drinks, shops, home, bed, work. But what would happen if one day you just jacked it all in, to survive on next to nothing?
Katharine Hibbert decided to find out.
No job, no rented flat, no shopping, no debit card and no travel pass.
Katharine decided to give it all up, to walk the streets with only a backpack and spend a year living off the food, clothes, other goods and accommodation that would otherwise go to waste. It would be year of squatting, scavenging and no spending.
Would she survive and if she did would she ever want to go back?
The journey takes her on a fascinating trip, from drug-dens to lavish squatted mansions. She has to learn to fend for herself and to trust the generosity of strangers and friends she makes along theway. She falls into a hidden community who teach her how to build a life using the things that others throw away, and finds that life on the margins amounts to so much more than you might think.
Adventures on the margins of a wasteful society
By: Katharine Hibbert
What happens when you walk away from everything that you think you can't live without?
For many the daily grind can feel like a trap - work, gym, drinks, shops, home, bed, work. But what would happen if one day you just jacked it all in, to survive on next to nothing?
Katharine Hibbert decided to find out.
No job, no rented flat, no shopping, no debit card and no travel pass.
Katharine decided to give it all up, to walk the streets with only a backpack and spend a year living off the food, clothes, other goods and accommodation that would otherwise go to waste. It would be year of squatting, scavenging and no spending.
Would she survive and if she did would she ever want to go back?
The journey takes her on a fascinating trip, from drug-dens to lavish squatted mansions. She has to learn to fend for herself and to trust the generosity of strangers and friends she makes along theway. She falls into a hidden community who teach her how to build a life using the things that others throw away, and finds that life on the margins amounts to so much more than you might think.
ordered online for the winner of the wings or wishlist sweepstakes - january 2022
supplier has confirmed shipping
congratulations
happy reading
;)
supplier has confirmed shipping
congratulations
happy reading
;)
this sounds like an intresting book - i'll look for it in the library - i'm very much against waste and consumerism...
Industry Reviews
A fascinating study which proves that waste is aplenty in our consumer society. * The Independent *
Free is part squatting guide, part diary and is loaded with statistics. Sometimes it feels as if Hibbert has counted every Pret A Manger sandwich that ended up in a landfill. Her anger at the waste of consumer society is relentless.Over the past year, we have focused on the fall of the bankers, but Free is a reminder that the recession has had an equally dramatic effect on those several rungs below them on the financial ladder. * The Telegraph *
In this account of her varied, and largely positive, experiences, Hibbert paints a detailed and often funny self-portrait of a young Londoner who sneaks fox-like around her city, managing to survive off its detritus for a whole year, affording her the time to appreciate her choices and her relative youth more fully than had she stayed in her "cosy, domesticated rut * Times Literary Supplement *
Her book is a passionate plea against the rubbish society. It might not be free, but it's worth reading even if you don't find it in a skip. * ROOF - Shelter's Housing Magazine *
Industry Reviews
A fascinating study which proves that waste is aplenty in our consumer society. * The Independent *
Free is part squatting guide, part diary and is loaded with statistics. Sometimes it feels as if Hibbert has counted every Pret A Manger sandwich that ended up in a landfill. Her anger at the waste of consumer society is relentless.Over the past year, we have focused on the fall of the bankers, but Free is a reminder that the recession has had an equally dramatic effect on those several rungs below them on the financial ladder. * The Telegraph *
In this account of her varied, and largely positive, experiences, Hibbert paints a detailed and often funny self-portrait of a young Londoner who sneaks fox-like around her city, managing to survive off its detritus for a whole year, affording her the time to appreciate her choices and her relative youth more fully than had she stayed in her "cosy, domesticated rut * Times Literary Supplement *
Her book is a passionate plea against the rubbish society. It might not be free, but it's worth reading even if you don't find it in a skip. * ROOF - Shelter's Housing Magazine *
Journal Entry 4 by LadyIndigo at Winner of Sweepstakes, A Bookcrossing member -- Controlled Releases on Tuesday, February 1, 2022
Released 2 yrs ago (2/2/2022 UTC) at Winner of Sweepstakes, A Bookcrossing member -- Controlled Releases
CONTROLLED RELEASE NOTES:
congratulations
happy reading
;)
happy reading
;)
Journal Entry 5 by shnedwards at Birmingham, West Midlands United Kingdom on Monday, February 7, 2022
Did you... did you send me two books? You are very naughty/generous!
Thank you very much, I am looking forward to reading this one :)
Thank you very much, I am looking forward to reading this one :)
Journal Entry 6 by shnedwards at Birmingham, West Midlands United Kingdom on Wednesday, January 31, 2024
This was a really interesting read. I was aware that food waste and empty housing are problems but it was good to read a more personal account. I would be interested to know what has changed in the last 14 years since this book was written.
I know that there are now various companies and apps aimed at reducing food waste, and I feel more inspired to use them after reading this book. Here are some that I use:
Oddbox (rescued fruit and veg, not cheap): https://www.oddbox.co.uk/
Too Good To Go (surplus food from shops and cafes/takeaways/restaurants): https://www.toogoodtogo.com/en-gb
Olio (sharing food and non-food items between individuals): https://olioapp.com/en/
I've also found local groups on Facebook very useful for sharing/disposing of unwanted items.
Thanks again for sending me this book, LadyIndigo! Reserving for a swap with daffodil-2
I know that there are now various companies and apps aimed at reducing food waste, and I feel more inspired to use them after reading this book. Here are some that I use:
Oddbox (rescued fruit and veg, not cheap): https://www.oddbox.co.uk/
Too Good To Go (surplus food from shops and cafes/takeaways/restaurants): https://www.toogoodtogo.com/en-gb
Olio (sharing food and non-food items between individuals): https://olioapp.com/en/
I've also found local groups on Facebook very useful for sharing/disposing of unwanted items.
Thanks again for sending me this book, LadyIndigo! Reserving for a swap with daffodil-2
Journal Entry 7 by shnedwards at Birmingham, West Midlands United Kingdom on Saturday, February 10, 2024
Released 2 mos ago (2/10/2024 UTC) at Birmingham, West Midlands United Kingdom
CONTROLLED RELEASE NOTES:
On its way to daffodil-2 by second-class post
Received in the post today from Shnedwards as part of a swap. Thanks very much-will look forward to reading it.