Evezy year, massive and ever-increasing amounts of waste are generated worldwide. This is giving rise to the dual problem of diminishing resources and overflowing landfills. However, waste can be used as a resource to make new products, while simultaneously saving landfill space. This book addresses an array of different waste streams (e.g., plastic packaging, food wastes, mine wastes, and wastewater) as well as numerous issues associated with converting waste materials into useful resources. Chapter contributors discuss the use of these diverse waste steams in a practical manner and from a commercial perspective, rather than in a lab-based research context. They address chemical and engineering issues in a multidisciplinary approach, but at a level that makes the book more suited to a teclmical readership than a general audience. Besides describing the chemical, technical, and engineering issues associated with collection and use of waste streams, a noteworthy feature of this book is that in several chapters, the authors specifically examine economic and policy issues associated with waste as a resource. Therefore, while the readership for this book is likely to be multidisciplinary, it is also likely to be a higher-level readership. Summing Up: Recommended. Graduate students, researchers/faculty, and professionals/practitioners.-- P. G. Heiden, Michigan Technological University -- P. G. Heiden CHOICE - Vol. 51 No. 10