The Big Necessity: The Unmentionable World of Human Waste and Why It Matters

Book review by Deane Barker tags: science
An image of the cover of the book "The Big Necessity: The Unmentionable World of Human Waste and Why It Matters"

This is a book about pooping. Not personally, but as a species. How we deal with our poop, around the world.

It’s what I call a “vignette book.” Over 10 or so chapters, the author tells disconnected stories that each explain some aspect of the story of poop.

Examples:

The book doesn’t build linearly, like a textbook. It jumps around, each chapter being some story or anecdote about the subject.

It’s well-written. It’s chapter is engaging and interesting, and author really has a nice style. She gets a little lyrical in places – this is absolutely not a dry, factual dissection of the topic.

But I would have liked something a little more linear and constructive. It took me until 3-4 chapters in before I figured out the format and that no chapter really related to the chapter before it. This is personal preference, I guess.

The book is unquestionably interesting, and it discusses something that few books (or people) really care to discuss. I know a little more than when I started it, and that’s the whole point, I guess.

Book Info

Author
Rose George
Year
Pages
238
Acquired
  • I have read this book. According to my records, I completed it on .
  • A hardcover copy of this book is currently in my home library.

Here are some notes I took on the acquisition of this book:

Bought it at Jackson Street Booksellers in Omaha

Links to this – Spies, Lies, and Algorithms: The History and Future of American Intelligence September 7, 2023
This is a lovely overview of the U.S. Intelligence Community by a woman that teaches a course on it at Stanford. In fact, the book reads like a textbook (surprise – it is a textbook ) . Each chapter covers a different aspect of intelligence. For example: Analysis Counterintelligence Covert action...
Links to this – Behind Closed Doors: The Secret Life of London's Private Members' Clubs November 24, 2022
I have a romantic view of social clubs, especially those in London. I think I get it from James Bond novels. I love the idea of upper class Englishmen having a whisky at “the club” while debating politics or other matters of world importance. This book is a wonderfully readable history of those...
Links to this – Ninety Percent of Everything: Inside Shipping, The Invisible Industry That Puts Clothes On Your Back, Gas In Your Car, and Food On Your Plate November 6, 2022
I like the subjects of Rose George’s books. She writes about the background stuff that we don’t think about. This book is about the global shipping trade. She wrote another entire book about going to the bathroom . I think these subjects are interesting. But I don’t love how she writes about them....
Links to this – The $12 Million Stuffed Shark: The Curious Economics of Contemporary Art August 18, 2022
I absolutely loved this book. It explains the world of contemporary art – who buys it, how it sells, and why it becomes valuable. Lots of books seek to explain things like this, but they think they can do it through anecdotes and vignettes. The books spend each chapter focused on a person. They...