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A Poison Like No Other: How Microplastics Corrupted Our Planet and Our Bodies by Matt Simon (2022) 252 pp., Island Press, Washington, DC, USA. ISBN 978-1-64283-235-8 (hbk), USD 30.00.

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A Poison Like No Other: How Microplastics Corrupted Our Planet and Our Bodies by Matt Simon (2022) 252 pp., Island Press, Washington, DC, USA. ISBN 978-1-64283-235-8 (hbk), USD 30.00.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 September 2023

Catrin Norris*
Affiliation:
catrin.norris@fauna-flora.org Fauna & Flora, Cambridge, UK

Abstract

Type
Book Review
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of Fauna & Flora International

On opening the first page you will see that the author, Matt Simon, has dedicated his book to planet Earth: ‘Sorry about the mess’. A fitting opening for a book about how we have managed to thoroughly plasticize our planet in less than a century. I read this book either side of attending the second meeting of the UN global plastic pollution treaty in Paris, a treaty to develop an international, legally binding agreement that will address the entire life cycle of plastics—from design to production and disposal—and aim to curb plastic pollution, including in the marine environment. Many countries support an ambitious treaty and seem committed to take this once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to end plastic pollution. However, a powerful minority of oil- and plastic-producing countries advocate downstream solutions only, meaning measures that will allow plastic production to continue in a business-as-usual scenario. After reading A Poison Like No Other, it is hard to fathom how anyone could deny that we are in a serious plastic crisis, and how anyone could not want to do everything in their power to end the scourge of plastic pollution.

The book focuses on microplastics, defined as plastic particles that typically measure less than 5 mm. Such small plastic pieces are either produced in this size (e.g. as microplastic ingredients and plastics pellets), or are the result of the degradation and break-down of larger plastic pieces. Although most people are aware of unsightly plastic pollution on beaches, plastic waste clogging waterways and entangling wildlife, Simon explains that micro- and nanoplastic pollution is a problem that has long gone under the radar, largely unseen and thus ignored for too long. However, this is a crisis that the world is beginning to wake up to. The impacts of microplastics, as the author details, are far-reaching. He describes microplastics as ‘the pernicious glitter that has bastardized the whole of Earth, a forever-residue from the party that is consumerism’ (p. 3).

The book leads the reader on a voyage of discovery and demonstrates how microplastics have infiltrated every ecosystem. The opening chapter provides a clear and detailed description of plastics, including how they are produced from fossil fuels, the chemical and toxicological elements of different types of plastic and how they affect fauna, flora and human health. The following three chapters deep-dive into how microplastics have saturated the ocean, land and air, engaging and enraging the reader on the magnitude of the issue and changing how you look at everything around you: the food on your plate, the clothes you wear and the air you breathe—it makes for an utterly depressing read. But just when one starts to feel completely doomed and overwhelmed by the severity of the issue, Simon picks the reader up, acknowledging that although the topic is heavy, solutions will follow. As promised, the fifth and final chapter—albeit shorter than the rest—provides readers with much-needed positive solutions to the crisis. These focus on upstream actions that stem the flow of plastics into the environment, including capping plastic production, calling for more research into and full transparency about the chemicals used to produce plastics, and proposing taxes on plastic materials.

The book is science-led, but thankfully Simon's chatty tone makes the science behind plastic production, degradation and toxicological elements easily digestible and appealing to a broad audience. The narrative flows effortlessly from one topic to the next, consistently supported by scientific research and conversations with scientists and micro- and nanoplastic professionals. Although microplastic pollution is undoubtedly the central focus of the book, the connection between plastic pollution, climate change, biodiversity loss, and environmental and human health is interwoven throughout.

The clear message from the book is that microplastics are everywhere, contaminating every ecosystem, community and species. A Poison Like No Other is a stark reminder that for too long society has been blind to this issue and systemic change is needed now. As negotiations continue between UN member states to create a new global treaty to end plastic pollution, I suggest that A Poison Like No Other should be listed as mandatory reading for all country delegates, in the hope that one day we no longer need to apologize to planet Earth about the mess.