Skip to main content

Featured

Falling in love at Pennycress Inn by Sarah Hope #Review #ThePennycressInnSeriesBook2

I am thrilled to feature Book 2 in  The Pennycress Inn Series  by Sarah Hope . Falling in love at Pennycress Inn was published by Boldwood Books on June 15th. You can read my review of  Welcome to Pennycress Inn   here .  Is this just a summer romance or could it be more? Nicola grew up at Pennycress Inn, in the beautiful Cotswold village of Meadowfield, and now she’s come full circle by landing a job there. After a difficult few months, she’s happy to be back in the place she loves and calls home. The whole village is looking forward to the annual summer carnival, and Nicola is charged with asking the local farmers to lend their tractors and trailers for the occasion. It’s an easy task – until she meets the new owner of Little Mead Farm, who stubbornly refuses to help. On sabbatical from his City job for the summer, Charlie wants to do up his late uncle’s farm and put it on the market as soon as possible. The place might have been in his family for genera...

The Joyful Environmentalist : How to practise without Preaching by Isabel Losada, #Extract

Today we are taking a look at a book which seeks to take a non-judgemental approach to the environment First, here's a little about the book and then, take a look at an extract:

The Joyful Environmentalist feel sad, guilty and disempowered, Isabel encourages us to enthusiastically embrace every single way ordinary people can care for our planet and enrich our lives while doing so. Written in short chapters for busy people, this book doesn’t describe the reasons why we are in the situation we’re in but goes straight to all the ways that every day consumers can make a difference. Her aim: to change how we live and work, travel, shop, eat, drink, dress, vote, play, volunteer, bank – everything.

  Isabel believes the way to approach these vital life adjustments is wholeheartedly, energetically, and joyfully. She takes us with her as she plants trees in the Scottish Highlands, invites us to enjoy the expected human connection that a power cut brings and to ponder the dilemma of long-haul flights. Along the way, we sit in on an interview with Riverford Organics founder Guy Singh-Watson on the ups and downs of supplying groceries ethically, join Isabel on an emotional roller-coaster of campaigning with Extinction Rebellion and hear what the CEO of her green energy supplier is really doing for the environment.


The Joyful Environmentalist


Extract: Introduction


What I’m doing is this. I’m looking for every single way that I can help the planet. How we live and work, travel, shop, eat, drink, dress, vote, play, volunteer, bank – everything.

We all want to do what we can to make a difference. But it’s a bit overwhelming – and we’re busy. We either have too many school or university exams, too many bills or way too many humans in our lives. We don’t have many hours in the day spare and few of us are getting enough sleep. So, as with my previous books, I’ve done a little research on your behalf. All you have to do is read and use any of the ideas that you like.

And life is short. So joy is vital. There is a lot of overwhelm around this subject which doesn’t help. Where do you start? The good news is that there is much that we can do. So much. Let’s enjoy changing the way we live and make choices that enhance life for ourselves and for others. Anything less is a disservice to our one brief life and to our beautiful planet.

I’ve written this in a way that will suit those of us who read but now spend more time on social media. It has short bits and long bits. It will suit you if you have small children and so have long since given up hope of being able to sit down for more than ten minutes. Or if you’re intention-rich but time-poor. It has stories, reflections, ideas and, most importantly, every single solution I could find. This is the single-minded focus: solutions. I hope it will be funny in parts and that, for those of us determined to do what we can to love our planet better, it will be useful. It will be good company if you just want to read two pages at the beginning or end of the day. It’s not a linear journey because everything connects to everything. Instead, the sections build together, like a jigsaw, to make a picture and a plan..

Please read with a pen or a pencil. Be sure that your writing implement is made of metal or wood and not of plastic. No one needs a home with 32 plastic biros. Those days are gone. You’ll see. It will become a habit. Anyway, with your beloved non-plastic writing implement, please feel free to underline. To cross things out. To find me wrong. To find something useful and draw a star in the margin. You even have my permission to turn over the corners of pages. Please steal my ideas. Make them better.

So that’s the ‘joyful’ bit. As to being an environmentalist – who or what is one of those? Wangari Maathai? Jane Goodall? David Attenborough? Greta Thunberg? The dictionary defines an environmentalist as ‘a person who seeks to improve the quality of the natural environment and to protect it from harmful human activity.’ If you’re holding this book you probably recognized yourself in the title. That’s you. That’s me. That’s all the sane ones who live on this earth.

And why do we need to practise without preaching? Surely I’m preaching here, you ask? Ha – well spotted. Yes, I am, but there is a difference between solicited advice and unsolicited advice. If we preach to others by giving advice that people haven’t asked for or telling others what they should and shouldn’t be doing, we are likely to lose friends and alienate people. Most importantly, because humans are often perverse, (lots of overgrown teenagers around), this is unlikely to create what we need – which is major change in the way that we think and live. What we can do is put our own house fully in order – our own life – and this book has some ideas as to how you can do that.

Don’t be discouraged by people saying your actions are just a drop in the ocean. What’s an ocean except millions upon millions of drops? And if you’ve ever seen a stalactite or a stalagmite, you’ll know small drops can produce spectacular results.

You are an environmentalist. One who wants to be part of the solution. We are many. We are millions.

Book link: Amazon UK

Published by Watkins Publishing on July 14th.

About the Author



Isabel Losada

You can follow Isabel here:

Website

 

Comments

  1. Wonderful, i will check the book!.. can somebody direct me to find books about ... christian book of life mostly deal with bible ideology thanks.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular Posts