♻️ Zero Waste
Practical guides to reducing household waste, rethinking consumption, and refusing the throwaway economy.
Zero Waste
14 books in this categoryWhat happens to your donated clothes, appliances, and furniture? Minter follows the global secondhand trade from American donation bins to markets in Ghana, Japan, and Mexico.
A journalist who grew up in the scrap trade takes you inside the global recycling industry — and forces a reckoning with what 'recycling' actually means.
The definitive intellectual framework for the circular economy — rigorous, readable, and more radical than the corporate sustainability language it is often wrapped in.
A celebration of the repair movement — the community repair cafés, right-to-repair advocates, and skilled fixers building an alternative to throwaway culture.
The sequel to Cradle to Cradle — moving from the theory of circular design to its practical implementation, and arguing that sustainability is not the ceiling but the floor.
A gentle, room-by-room guide to decluttering and simplifying — less intense than KonMari, more practical than most minimalism manifestos.
The book companion to Cowspiracy — making the case that animal agriculture is the leading driver of environmental destruction.
Vandyke's follow-up goes deeper — applying zero-waste thinking not just to physical consumption but to time, energy, and digital life.
A beautifully photographed guide to natural home products, DIY cleaning recipes, and low-waste living with genuine craft.
A practical, research-backed guide to eliminating food waste — written by the food systems scientist who put food waste on the American policy agenda.
Fermentation, scrap cooking, seasonal eating — Bonneau makes zero-waste cooking feel like the obvious and delicious way to cook.
Greenpeace UK's oceans campaigner provides a room-by-room guide to removing plastic from your home and your life — practical, accessible, and clear about its limits.
A room-by-room guide to making your home more sustainable — practical and beautifully presented, though it skims surfaces where it could go deeper.
The book that launched the modern zero-waste movement — practical, prescriptive, and more accessible than the Instagram version suggests.