Sleeping Naked is Green by Vanessa Farquharson, a green book review
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A green book review by Karen Ann Teeters You could buy a book that lists and explains a hundred ways to go green, to conserve resources, to protect nature and people and you should buy that book. And then you’ll read it and think – Where do I start? What will my life be like if I commit to all these green tips? Can I do it and stick with it when most people I know don’t even get it? How do I get support and encouragement and deal with the ridicule? If you have all those questions, I have another book suggestion for you! Vanessa Farquharson has made the green commitment and has written a very intelligent, witty book about the experience of going green everyday for a whole year.
The clever title of her book is Sleeping Naked is Green and is one of the reasons I bought this book over Living with Ed and No Impact Man but those books are on my green book review list! The subtitle is: “How an eco-cynic unplugged her fridge, sold her car and found love in 366 days.” Sounds like more fun than most best selling fiction books these days, doesn’t it? So I read it in two sittings, just ate it up – no high fructose corn syrup or MSG to worry about, just totally organic straight up green experiences with a dollop or two of Canadian wit. Vanessa commits to the whole thing on the world wide web by journaling daily on her blog at www.greenasathistle.com and announces the new blog/green project to everyone she knows. Explaining her new green commitment she says, “So much of the green dialogue comes to a grinding halt with a list of redundant tips, empty reassurances about how easy, fun and chic it is to be green; or finger-pointing at corporations, governments,and the general public about whose responsibility it is to save the planet and whether we’re all doomed. Enough already. It is time people stopped talking so much and started doing something-anything.”
So everyday for a year she blogged about the green changes she made. She went at it in a down to earth manner to see which tips were realistic for her and which might be too hardcore. I like her personal approach to becoming green and I also like her genuine, humorous, hip way of sharing these green and sometimes very off beat, whacky, experiences. Each chapter lists all of the green changes she has made each day for that month. And then she shares with us the most memorable effects of some of the more interesting changes-online dating with greensingles.com, unplugging the refrigerator, storing the compost bin in the living room.
Vanessa brings in all the characters of her life and how these green changes affect them as well. Vanessa’s cat, her sister, her best friend, her mother and father, her potential new boyfriends and all her new blog friends have something to say and share and new to feel when one wave in their ocean goes almost entirely green. Composting, toilet skills, meat eating, commuting to work, dining out all get a green whack at the reality of change on a real life. And to make it even more fun,Vanessa shares with us her efforts and desire to have a compatible,hopefully green man in her life as well. A totally organic eating massage therapist, a do-gooder childhood friend or maybe one of the hot Toronto recycle trash guys are all suspects. Her perspective is fresh and fun and totally real with a cynic’s view and a convert’s genuine efforts. You want her to get her man and the green life that will work for her. In her own words, “…trying to be Gaia’s prodigal daughter, striving for absolute eco- perfection, would only make me neurotic, I’d obsess about every detail…there’s no hope of convincing people to change their lives for the greener as long as they can look at environmentalists and see nothing but a one-dimensional-tree-hugger ready to pounce on every strike against Mother Nature.”
And so she finds her own way and slips and falls and keeps her healthy cynicism. She knows she won’t keep all 365 plus green changes in her life after the year and that makes her real. Her experience makes you say to yourself that maybe you can do something like this in your own life. Near the end of her green year she listens to the words of a Bob Dylan song: “The only thing I knew how to do was to keep on keepin’ on like a bird that flew, tangled up in blue” She contemplates that and shares, “I wasn’t so much a bird tangled up in blue—more like a girl tangled up in green—but whatever the metaphor, a sense of peacefulness began to flow through me knowing that at the end of this day, and everyday, what I was doing was good, what lay ahead of me could only get better, and if I just kept on flying forward with all my strength, everything would be okay.”
She also wisely shares the knowledge that the commitment to making those green changes for anyone is made knowing that the right green thing to do today can change tomorrow with new research but that does not mean that we stop making those changes. She has the desire to get a better grasp on which changes have the biggest impact. She shares that, “ the less stuff I have in my life, the more fulfilled I feel.” But hey, I suggest you read this book for yourself. You’ll feel like you are on this green roller coaster ride with Vanessa. You’ll get into her humor and into her heart. Worth the time. Five Stars. This book would make a great movie (hint hint). Vanessa is a reporter for a Toronto, Canada newspaper and I suggest you enjoy her blog at www.greenasathistle.com Karen Ann Teeters is a green blogger and you can find more of her writing,reviews and thoughts at www.greenlivingzone.com
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Did you read this green book? What do you think? What other green tips books have you read that you found useful or liked? And Why?
