Book Review: ‘Keep the Memories, Lose the Stuff’

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Updated 01 January 2026
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Book Review: ‘Keep the Memories, Lose the Stuff’

If you are someone who adopts a new year, new me mindset every Dec. 31, then Matt Paxton’s 2022 book “Keep the Memories, Lose the Stuff: Declutter, Downsize, and Move Forward with Your Life,” written with Jordan Michael Smith, is worth picking up.

In the process of reading it, I found myself filling four bags with items to donate.

Paxton’s approach is notably different from Marie Kondo’s once-ubiquitous Japanese tidying method, which asks readers to pile all their possessions into one part of the room, hold each item up and ask whether it sparks joy.

While Kondo’s philosophy sounds appealing on paper — thanking objects and dedicating an entire weekend to the process — it is not realistic for everyday life. Paxton’s method feels more practical and gentler.

Paxton knows the emotional terrain of clutter well. For more than 20 years he has helped people declutter and downsize. He was a featured cleaner on the reality show “Hoarders” and later hosted the Emmy-nominated “Legacy List with Matt Paxton” on PBS.

Through this work, Paxton gained insight into why people hold on to things and what makes letting go difficult even of what seemingly looks useless.

What works especially well is how personal the book feels from the outset.

He opens by explaining his anxiety-inducing decision to move to a different US state with his three children, and all of their stuff, to live with his new wife and all of her stuff.

Together, they would be raising seven children — very Brady Bunch style — but with slightly more practical life considerations.

He also talks about how he got into this line of work. When he was in his 20s, his father died and he had to help clear out his belongings. He found that process to be cathartic and special. And he was good at it.

Soon after, short on cash, he accepted a job from someone in his small, close-knit community to help organize her home — likely hired out of pity more than anything else.

That slow process of sifting through items and learning the stories behind each one — directly from the owner of those objects — sparked plenty of joy. He was hooked.

Throughout the book, Paxton makes the case for consistency. His advice is manageable. He encourages readers to dedicate just 10 minutes a day to decluttering to form a habit. We all can spare that.

Paxton also stresses the importance of communication.

Talk to your loved ones about what you want done with your belongings when you are no longer around, and just as importantly, listen to what they want done with theirs, he urges. He offers practical guidance on having these conversations with parents, partners and children.

One critique of this book is that Paxton dedicates a large portion to physical photographs. While this is relevant for many older readers, it may feel less urgent going forward, particularly for Gen Z and younger, whose clutter is more likely to be solely digital.

Ultimately, “Keep the Memories, Lose the Stuff” is less about getting rid of things than about making space; by speaking about objects, sharing their stories and allowing them — and each of us — to move on.


What We Are Reading Today: ‘Talking As Fast as I Can’

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Updated 16 January 2026
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What We Are Reading Today: ‘Talking As Fast as I Can’

  • Graham writes the same way she talks; similar to her signature linguistic sing-song banter on the show; her witty and pun-filled rapid-fire dialogue, mostly written by the show’s creator, Amy Sherman-Palladino

Author: Lauren Graham

Did you recently rewatch “Gilmore Girls” now that the winter weather is upon us?

If you are the type who goes down the rabbit hole looking up the actors after binging a show, this book is for you. It is written by none other than the original but fictional Gilmore “girl,” Lorelai, played by actress Lauren Graham.

In her 2016 release, “Talking as Fast as I Can: From Gilmore Girls to Gilmore Girls (and Everything in Between),” Graham celebrates the show — and the character — she is best known for.

Graham writes the same way she talks; similar to her signature linguistic sing-song banter on the show; her witty and pun-filled rapid-fire dialogue, mostly written by the show’s creator, Amy Sherman-Palladino.

But this is Graham’s voice.

Like many others of said demographic, I decided to recently rewatch the show that aired between 2000 and 2007 and was revived in a four-part Netflix special a decade later. It stands the test of time. And it also does not. Both can be true.

Published just days after the 2016 Netflix special, “Gilmore Girls: A Year in the Life,” the overall story in this book is fascinating.

I particularly liked the insider insights on Graham’s journey, from being born in Hawaii (seemingly random) to living part of her childhood in Japan (super kawaii, or cute). It was clear her family was one of adventurers and her zigzagging around the globe as a youngster propelled her into a space in Hollywood and the immense fame that followed her.

She does mention some of her other acting and life roles she acquired, such as a real college student in New York and waitress-waiting-to-make-it, to being a star in another hit show, “Parenthood,” which ran from 2010-2015 (also now available on Netflix).

But, let us face it, she will forever be known as Lorelai. And she seems to be fine with that.

As a young viewer, I used to identify with the character Rory, played by her daughter on the series, Alexis Bledel, who went on to become an aspiring journalist in the show and in the series. As time passed, and the older and wiser I became, I identified more with Lorelai’s mother, Emily. I sort of skipped Lorelai as being my favorite Gilmore “girl” and that is perhaps by design.

Lorelai became a single mother at 16, deciding to run away from her affluent life and “overbearing parents” and into the warm embrace of a tiny town, the fictional Stars Hollow.

At the series start, Lorelai is a stubborn and resourceful 32-year-old with the perfect child, Rory, who is 16 — the same age she was when she birthed her. But somehow, through circumstance and happenstance, Lorelai is forced to flock back to parts of her old life, bringing Rory, and all of us with her.

In 2026, it is 26 years after the original show’s premiere and a decade after the special. Now that both are on Netflix MENA, viewers young and young-at-heart can easily access the Stars Hollow-sphere.

Viewers of this aforementioned demographic will instantly recognize the iconic and airy “la la la…” and while many may not know the composer of those incidental music and vocal interludes embedded throughout the episodes, Sam Phillips, one would certainly recognize the face and voice of Lorelai.

Now you can read all about her in book form.