Catalog

Record Details

Search Results

Catalog Search

Search Results

Refine Search

Search Results filters

Filtered by:

Locations

Adult New Non-Fiction ×

Additional search filters and navigation

Slow death by rubber duck : how the toxicity of everyday life affects our health Book
Book | 10th anniversary ed. | Knopf Canada, Toronto : 2019.

  • 1 of 1 Copy Available at Libraries in Niagara Cooperative (Show)
  • 0 of 0 Copies Available at Niagara-on-the-Lake Library System
  • 0 current holds with 1 total copy.
Place Hold
Branch Call Number Location Holdable? Status
About

"The landmark book about the toxicity of everyday life, updated, revised and re-issued for its 10th anniversary, along with the experiments from Smith and Lourie's second book, Toxin Toxout. It's amazing how little can change in a decade. In 2009, a book transformed the way we see our frying pans, thermometers and tuna sandwiches. Daily life was bathing us in countless toxins that accumulated in our tissues, were passed on to our children and damaged our health. To expose the extent of this toxification, environmentalists Rick Smith and Bruce Lourie offered themselves to science and undertook a series of over a dozen experiments to briefly raise their personal levels of mercury, BPA, Teflon and other pollutants. The ease with which ordinary activities caused dangerous levels to build in their bodies was a wake-up call, and readers all over the world responded. But did government regulators and corporations? Ten years later, there is good news. But not much. Concise, shocking, practical and hopeful, this new combined edition of one of the most important books ever published about green living will put the nasty stuff back where it belongs: on the national agenda and out of our bodies."--From publisher.
Loading...
Details

  • ISBN: 9780735275706 (pbk.)
  • Physical Description: 369 p. : ill., charts ; 22 cm.
  • Edition: 10th anniversary ed.
  • Publisher: Toronto : Knopf Canada, 2019.
  • General Note:
    "Fully expanded and updated".

Additional Resources