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The Year without a Purchase
The Year without a Purchase: One Family's Quest to Stop Shopping and Start Connecting | Scott Dannemiller
5 posts | 3 read | 9 to read
The Year without a Purchase is the story of one family's quest to stop shopping and start connecting. Scott Dannemiller and his wife, Gabby, are former missionaries who served in Guatemala. Ten years removed from their vow of simple living, they found themselves on a never-ending treadmill of consumption where each purchase created a desire for more and never led to true satisfaction. The difference between needs and wants had grown very fuzzy, and making that distinction clear again would require drastic action: no nonessential purchases for a whole year. No clothes, no books, no new toys for the kids. If they couldn't eat it or use it up within a year (toilet paper and shampoo, for example), they wouldn't buy it. Filled with humorous wit, curious statistics, and poignant conclusions, the book examines modern America's spending habits and chronicles the highs and lows of dropping out of our consumer culture. As the family bypasses the checkout line to wrestle with the challenges of gift giving, child rearing, and keeping up with the Joneses, they discover important truths about human nature and the secret to finding true joy. The Year without a Purchase offers valuable food for thought for anyone who has ever wanted to reduce stress by shopping less and living more.
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saresmoore Another Folio, too? 7y
Bookwomble @saresmoore Yes! A 1960 edition of Apuleius' "The Golden Ass". It's slightly water damaged, but for £3.50 I thought it was reasonable. 7y
saresmoore Very cool! Great finds. 7y
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Bookwomble @saresmoore I was particularly passed to find Alain-Fournier's "Le Grande Meulnes", as I read a book of his poetry last year which I really enjoyed, and the editor highly recommended this, his only novel. Sadly, he was killed in WWI at a relatively young age. 7y
saresmoore I haven‘t read it, but have heard that it‘s wonderfully haunting. I will be on the lookout for a copy, myself! 7y
LeahBergen I recently bought Le Grande Meaulnes, too (and I loved The Woman in Black). 7y
Bookwomble @LeahBergen They're both quite short, and I'm intro short books at the moment, so I might get to them both soonish 😊 7y
13 likes7 comments
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Readathon
Pickpick

Great food for thought!

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sherri
Pickpick

This author and his wife decided to go without purchasing anything other than necessities (groceries, toilet paper, etc.) for a year and didn't tell their kids. His account is insightful and funny. It's amazing how they worked around certain issues, like when he needed tight underwear after a vasectomy and tried his wife's too-big yoga pants. Loved this book.

marixa Always want to try something like this, but too scared I'll fail. 8y
sherri But what if you succeed, @marixa? I haven't set any particular rules, but since starting to read this, I have gone without extraneous purchases and even without eating out (which is huge for me). 10 days and counting... Mostly it's stopped me from going to stores as entertainment. 8y
23 likes3 stack adds2 comments
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sherri
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"I suspect the other fellas are former electricians slowly losing their hearing. When their wives said 'Cottage Cafe,' they heard 'Wattage Delay' and came running."

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ReadThisBookYall
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Pickpick

Raising a family of four kids in our consumer culture, I identified with the author's desire to disconnect from his "stuff" and reconnect w/ loved ones. Scott is hilarious, a master of self-deprecation who avoids sanctimony & guilt. Full review at ReadThisBookYall.com (Netgalley)

BookMusings Intriguing! 8y
LivinginaLibrary I loved this one but had kind of forgotten about it. I need to pick it up and do a refresh. 8y
ReadThisBookYall I enjoyed reading about their struggles much more than trying to declutter by testing my items for "Joy"! @LivinginaLibrary @BookMusings 8y
LivinginaLibrary Oh I so agree! I was much more inspired by this life style change than confining my books to one shelf in my closest and thanking my sweaters. 8y
rubyslippersreads I assume this doesn't apply to purchasing books. 😸 8y
14 likes2 stack adds5 comments