Trash!
A Garbageman's Story
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- Pedido anticipado
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- Se espera: 16 jun 2026
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- USD 10.99
-
- Pedido anticipado
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- USD 10.99
Descripción editorial
A Montreal garbageman's sharp and funny memoir/exposé, in which he attempts to convince people to "stop imagining that your garbage magically disappears" . . .
This fascinating no-b******t account of twenty years in waste management paints a vivid portrait of the heroic labor, anarchic spirit, and violent conditions of the people who keep our cities clean.
Paré-Poupart’s story is atypical: he started working as a garbageman to pay for school, and after earning graduate degrees and working in more “respectable” fields, he is still on a truck — out of love for the physical rush, for his rough-and-tumble colleagues, and for an honesty and freedom that no other job has yet given him.
Includes eight black and white photographs of the author on the job.
His sociology background informs his inquiry into our collective wastefulness and individual failure to confront the trash we produce. Every abstract observation comes with hilarious and hair-raising stories from the collection route to his days off spent hunting down furniture and toys for family and friends, as a committed freegan.
Trash! — the French edition of which is a runaway bestseller in Canada — explains and questions efforts to “clean up” a business with longstanding conventions of its own, a last bastion of well-paid employment for people who cannot fit in anywhere else.
Aligned with great books about work from Zola to Orwell to Lucia Berlin, and in dialogue with societal critiques like How To Do Nothing, Trash! will change how you think about your waste and the people who handle it.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
"The garbageman is the Sisyphus of our consumer society, condemned to go from house to house picking up bags, swept along day after day in the never-ending flow of refuse we produce," writes Montréal sanitation worker Pare-Poupart in his bewitching debut memoir. Though he originally became a garbageman in 2003 to pay for college, Pare-Poupart soon developed an addiction to the physicality of the job—he describes wrestling bags filled with heavy construction debris and trying to tame recycling and compost pickups ("Want to know what a city smelled like during the Middle Ages? Take a shower in compost bin juice")—and kept at it for the following 20 years. He details sweet encounters with kids who idolize his work and outlines how the job informed his conversion to freeganism, a waste-reducing lifestyle he embraced after witnessing the sheer volume of trash people produce. In addition to his own musings, Pare-Poupart shares anecdotes about his eccentric compatriots, including Beaujeunehomme, who often shows up to work drunk, and Michel (aka Spandex), who speaks only to the garbage. Enlightening, unpretentious, and gently political, Pare-Poupart's fascinating account will help readers view their garbage in a whole new light. It's a treasure. Photos.