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Goodbye, Things (Penquin) 4 stars

Fumio Sasaki is not an enlightened minimalism expert or organizing guru like Marie Kondo—he’s just …

This book was a gift, so I felt compelled to read it. However, I have very mixed feeling about it. I am old and have started my döstädning, so I don't need convincing and I was hoping a couple of technique. I did get that, but at what price!! The author and I live on completely different planet, so it was very difficult to relate to anything in the book. A lot of what he says is just not applicable here * "put everything in a bag and bin it" - well no. we have to sort paper, metal, plastic, etc and that's what takes time... * "you can always order this and that and have it delivered" Can you really ? Well, not in my country... etc, etc. And then the enthusiasm of the born again minimalist ! tiring ! "Since I turned minimalist, I lost 5 kilos, won the lottery and I'm nominated for a Nobel Peace Price" (ok, slightly exaggerated, but not much). So there you go. I'm pretty sure plenty of people will enjoy this book and find it useful. I'm obviously not in the target audience.