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What We Do

Greenopia provides consumers with the means to make daily decisions that reduce their impact on the environment. Through our green business directories, product directories, community, news articles, blogs, and tips, we provide the information that is necessary to lead a healthy and sustainable lifestyle.

Our Directories

Greenopia's directories guide consumers to the businesses and products necessary to eat, shop, and live green. All listings are independently researched using 62 unique sets of category-specific criteria, ensuring that each business and produce meets precise qualifications. We never accept payment for listings.

Our Ratings

The Greenopia Leaf Ratings allow consumers to assess the overall greenness of a business or product. Four-Leaf Rated listings meet our most stringent criteria while One-Leaf Rated listings meet our minimum qualifying standards. The Greenopia Product Scorecard allows consumers to easily see the specific areas greenness.

Our Community

Greenopia's community provides a place for people to engage in sharing their favorite listings, meeting other people, sharing their eco-interests, blogging, discussing green topics, and much more. Our newsletter provides a distinct opportunity to stay current with new listings, compelling articles, and exclusive opportunities.

More Green Tips





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Best (Green) Beach Reading
      by Starshine Roshell News Archives

Sunglasses? Check. Beach towel? Check. All-natural sunscreen, organic snack and reusable aluminum water bottle? Got it, got it, got it.

But don't head out for some summer sunning without dropping one of these green-themed books into your beach bag. Whether you like a good mystery, a gripping true story or a practical how-to, these tales make great reading as you drag your toes through the sand. And they're all in paperback.

NONFICTION

Animal, Vegetable, Miracle: A Year of Food Life by Barbara Kingsolver.The eco-conscious, best-selling author of "The Poisonwood Bible" charts her family's experience(http://www.animalvegetablemiracle.com/) of spending a full year eating home-grown and locally grown food. Her husband Steven and daughter Camille contribute to the story, too. Warning: Might make you hungry.

Into the Wild by Jon Krakauer. Christopher McCandless was a successful college graduate who hitchhiked solo into the Alaskan wilderness in search of adventure, and ultimately died there. Krakauer pieces his adventures together from a found journal. The story was made into an Oscar-nominated film last year starring Emile Hirsch.

Green Chic: Saving the Earth in Style
by Christie Matheson. Printed on recycled paper, this guide offers useful, simple and realistic ways to cut down on consumption without sacrificing style. Plus it's a fun read along the way.


FICTION


The Road
by Cormac McCarthy. An Oprah's Book Club favorite, this post-apocalyptic yarn by the author of "No Country for Old Men" follows a father and son wandering through a charred global landscape grappling with survival, and morality.

Skinny Dip by Carl Hiassen. The snarky, hilarious Hiassen does it again in this Everglades-set novel about a corrupt marine biologist and the smart, sexy wife he can't seem to shake. His environmental commentary seeps through the satire.


CLASSIC


Big Woods: The Hunting Stories by William Faulkner.This collection of four stories from 1955 is perfect for easily distracted sun-worshippers. One of the greatest American writers offers his prescient commentary on man's impact on nature.

Dune
by Frank Herbert. The best-selling book behind the 1984 adventure film is considered the first major eco-themed sci-fi novel. Forty-three years after its original publication, its themes — especially the value of water — still resonate.

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