Bloomsbury © 2004, 242 pages [amazon]
Note: I read this book in part for The Sunday Salon. See this related post.
“Mongo” is a slang term–new to me–that refers to an object that has been reclaimed from the trash. According to The Cassell Dictionary of Slang, quoted at the beginning of Ted Botha’s book, it’s a term specific to New York, which is fitting because Botha’s exploration of mongo is likewise based in New York. In each of his ten chapters Botha discusses different types of trash reclamation by profiling some of the “collectors” he’s met. He writes about freegans and “canners” and artists who work with found objects, about “black baggers,” about people who trade in discarded books. (I had no idea so many people were throwing away books.) He profiles a pair of friends who dig up old privies in search of antiques. He writes about men who sift thcoarse old landfill when it’s dug up during construction. Unless you’ve thought about the subject matter before, you’ll probably be very surprised by the variety of mongo that exists.
[INSET TEXT: Botha writes, for example, that “black baggers” are on the lowest rung of the dumpster diving hierarchy.] Botha’s book is uneven. It includes a few too many passages in which the author rattles off long lists of items reclaimed from the trash. And it ends
Botha’s book isn’t perfect, but it’s worth the read. He’s hit on one of those wonderful topics that’s right at your feet but which only the blessedly curious think to explore. Kind of like mongo itself.
Tags: book reviews, books, dumpster diving, mongo, recycling, Ted Botha, tras
Original post by Debra Hamel















