![]() Real Simple magazine is devoted to the subject, as well as Martha Stewart Living the Lincoln Public Library subscribes to both. If you like to read short articles, just about every home magazine has regular tips and features on home organization. and it includes a great recycling and resources guide. Some books use decluttering as a way to decorate your home (Christopher Lowell's “Seven Layers of Organization: Unclutter Your Home, Unclutter Your Life”), some use humor to make you laugh all the way to the dump (Don Aslett’s “Clutter’s Last Stand”), some have interesting plans for conquering clutter (“Throw Out Fifty Things” by Gail Blanke), and some assert that the cause of clutter is us not the stuff (“Messie No More” by Sandra Felton).Īnother of my favorites is Donna Smallin’s “Organizing Plain & Simple.” It’s a clearly-written, complete guide to organizing just about everything you will ever have to deal with - your house, life transitions, finances, time, parent’s estate, etc. Our Minuteman Library Network (MLN) lists 56 books under the keyword ”clutter,” 418 books under “home organization.” (All the books mentioned here are available through the MLN.) It’s easy to browse through the Amazon or MLN reviews and table of contents glimpses to choose books to read that appeal to you. If you like to read books for ideas, carries 292 books on clutter, some of them bestsellers. If you’re like me, you’ve already started your decluttering projects, and may need a little encouragement if your initial momentum has slowed down.
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