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Death by Astonishment: Confronting the Mystery of the World's Strangest Drug

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AS FEATURED ON THE JOE ROGAN EXPERIENCE

For fans of the compelling, critical, and investigative style of best-selling authors Graham Hancock and Brian Muraresku, the first detailed account of the history and science of the world’s strangest and most mysterious drug - DMT.

DMT is the world’s strangest and most mysterious drug, inducing one of the most remarkable and yet least understood of all states of consciousness. This common plant molecule has, from ancient times to the modern day, been used as a tool to gain access to a bizarre alien reality of inordinate complexity and unimaginable strangeness, populated by a panoply of highly advanced, intelligent, and communicative beings entirely not of this world.

In a story that begins in the Amazonian rainforests and ends somewhere beyond the stars, Andrew Gallimore presents the first detailed account of the discovery of DMT and science’s continuing struggle to explain how such a simple and common plant molecule can have such astonishing effects on the human mind. The history of the drug involves many fascinating characters from the scientific and literary worlds — including legendary ethnobotanist Dr. Richard Schultes; renegade beat writer and drug aficionado William S. Burroughs; philosopher and raconteur Terence McKenna; and the high priest of the 1960s psychedelic revolution, Dr. Timothy Leary. In the end, the story of DMT forces us to reconsider our most basic assumptions about the nature of reality and our place within it.

311 pages, Kindle Edition

First published July 1, 2025

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Andrew R. Gallimore

3 books66 followers

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Profile Image for Jonathan Lu.
370 reviews24 followers
July 17, 2025
Very well researched book whose thesis sounds insane, but cannot be disproved (yet), and is presented almost as whimsically as the DMT-induced experience is itself. You cannot say that this is an uneducated theory, as the richness of this book comes from the in-depth ethnobotanical history of DMT and its discovery, its early experimentation in ethically questionable means by psychologists (mostly among prison populations), and more recent discoveries thanks to the work of Rick Strassman; Gallimore merges this interdisciplinary story well with biochemistry, translational neuroscience to the function of the brain, and Jungian-inspired psychological model of behavior. I was reminded of Rupert Sheldrake, another stellar research scientist, who in the absence of a compelling scientific root turned to spirituality as the drive for his theory… though in Gallimore's case the theory is less spiritual and more alien or at least with intelligent intention. I first came across Andew Gallimore when reading his 2015 paper about integrated information theory published in Frontiers in Human Neuroscience that was one of the most outstanding papers I've ever read about translational neuroscience. That's when I started to learn more about him and his theory first presented in "Alien Information Theory". While pointing out the merits and demerits of his theory, he does not come across so strongly as "this must be the only logical answer" but does present a compelling story that works. It's much less fulfilling to just say that the common trope experienced by about 50% of DMT users is an unexplained human reaction, much how we all have the same genetics and evolutionary anthropology that characterize the similar way that we emote to bipedal organisms - there is no such "why" in observation. It is more provocative to think that the "why" does not belong to us but rather another intelligent species. Makes me wonder if Carl Sagan's portrayal of alien communication being customized through our own brains was inspired by psychedelia, or perhaps our conclusion of information communicated during psychedelic experiences has been inspired by his masterful story. Also makes me wonder more about the mysterious content of jianshoujing mushrooms, as so many of the same adjectives "whimsical, lilliputian, comical, little people, alien" also apply though rarely in China are experiences of abduction, being split apart, tested on scientifically, or what should be terrifying scenarios.

History of plant medicinal chemistry and isolation - Serturner's isolation of morphine from poppy - called alkaloids because of slightly alkaline properties in solution: insoluble in alkaline solution and water, but soluble in acids. Tested on a group of teenagers he found on the streets.

Zerda-Bayon in 1905 seeking human volunteers to test isolated "telepathine" on, the chief commander of Caicedo Military station in Colombia who was interested in experiencing ayahuasca. Tested on himself as well and did not have visions - beginning to understand that it's more than 1 plant. [p29]

William S. Burroughs exploring in search of ayahuasca and coming upon Richard Schultes and Mark Plotkin in sampling B. caapi in the jungles of Colombia, before banisterine / telepathine / yageine were discovered to be the same as harmaline. In depth history of the early ethnobotanical research to discover the sources in South America, and eventually recognizing the same constituents as P. harmala.

History of DMT research, first synthesized by Richard Manske before discovery in nature. Stephen Szara was the first in Hungary to test in patients. Regular self-testing by Timothy Leary who met Nicholas Sand, a clandestine chemist who became the "Acid King" producing 5 million doses of LSD between 1965-1967; and Rick Strassman who received permission to do the study among patients in New Mexico. [p82] Szara later stepped up to have his own brain measured under DMT. This was during a time where Sem-Jacobsen took epileptic or psychotic patients and gave mescaline or LSD, that produced spikes of light information in the temporal lobes. [p173]

Harris Isbell and his experiments on "volunteers" who were prison inmates in Lexington, KY. Ran experiments feeding doses of LSD for up to 85 days in a row, and naturally they developed a tolerance. Also discovered cross tolerance in that they would have a reduced response to psilocybin or mescaline. Found that there was no cross tolerance effect with DMT or tolerance at all - confirmed by Rick Strassman's studies in that intensity of DMT never diminished - until its effect one day just stops, known as "the lockout" [p208]. Reported by users that would do DMT daily for hundreds of days, to suddenly find no more visions - believed that it's an intelligence of DMT to stop the user from experiencing after a certain point.

Karl Beringer in the 1920's first demonstrated improvement in motor control when Parkinson's patients were given harmine and harmaline - due to MAOi activity preventing the breakdown of dopamine. Jeremy Bigwood had the first hypothesis to combine 100mg DMT freebase with harmaline in 1978 [p96].

Jonathan Ott continued trials with Peganum harmala and Desmanthus illinoensis, demonstrating that traditional setting was not necessary for the effectiveness of DMT [p116]

Canadian physician David Lawrence at U of Toronto conducted a quantitative analysis of all Reddit trip reports from 2009-2018 (3778 reports) and found that half mentioned some flavor of an entity encounter. 2020 study at Johns Hopkins polling DMT users anonymously found that 43% responded that they had encountered a being that guided them, 39% called it alien, and 14% called them elves. [p126] In 1909, Raoul Leory a French psychiatrist named the visions Lilliputian - Terence McKenna called "machine elves" [p161]

Experiments of John Lilly who started taking LSD in a flotation tank in 1964 absent of sensory stimulation. Found ketamine to be the most effective due to dissociative effect. While lying in the tank, he saw highly colored 3 dimensional scenes with strange and unusual creatures. "Lilly's brain was constructing a model of the beings with whom he was interacting, in much the same way that the brain constructs - or is induced to construct - a model of the intelligences encountered in the DMT state." [p237]

Is DMT mimicking a dream? No - totally foreign and new imagery vs. dreams that are extrapolations from past experience. "Dreams are not random visions but selective simulations of the waking world." [p150] In fact the experiences of frightening but whimsical creatures doing experiments on you, even killing you, and transporting you up a moving tunnel are consistent with reports of alien abductees.


Julius Axelrod discovered that DMT came from tryptophan. Converted to DMT by indolethylamine-N-methyltransferase (INMT) which is ubiquitous across the animal kingdom [p158]. Studies in rabbits found a molecule in the brain of rabbits that suppresses INMT activity. This peptide is not well studied, but keeps less than 1% of tryptamine in blood samples from converting to DMT but has not been well characterized. DMT is neuro-protective and believed then to be regulated such that it's released in the absence of oxygen, i.e. when dying [p251]

Brain activity under DMT with yes closed was almost identical to normal visual stimulation - "engages the visual apparatus in a fashion that is consistent with actual exogenously driven visual perception." [p218]

Analyzing data from Rick Strassman's study, Gallimore found that DMT "breakthrough" occurs when brain concentration reaches 60ng/ml and peaks at 100 ng/ml. Below 60ng/ml is the threshold where not experienced. Ran a study funded by Anton Bilton who tested hiself with an IV drip to keep a steady level in the breakthrough zone and experience for more than just 15min [p237]

Difference between dreams and waking is the absence of sensory information - good model here about the impact between order and disorder, the fine line that psychedelics gives you the ability to straddle [p180]


Common archetype found in DMT experience: Collective unconscious is a set of innate neural programs (archetypes) shared by all humans (collective), mainly operating outside of conscious awareness (unconscious) that evolved to respond in fast, reliable, and stereotyped ways to all types of humans and other creatures that we might encounter [p183]
Jungian model of the psyche mapped to known functions of the brain [p189]
Profile Image for Nursebookie.
2,949 reviews442 followers
July 11, 2025
Thank you @stmartinspress for the gifted copy

TITLE: Death by Astonishment: Confronting the Mystery of the World's Strangest Drug
AUTHOR: Andrew Gallimore
PUB DATE: 07.01.2025

If you're looking for a book that challenges everything you think you know about consciousness, perception, and reality, Death by Astonishment: Confronting the Mystery of the World's Strangest Drug by Andrew Gallimore is a must-read. 🧠💫

In this fascinating exploration of DMT (Dimethyltryptamine), Gallimore takes us on a deep dive into the science, history, and cultural significance of this mind-bending molecule. 🌌

From ancient rituals to cutting-edge neuroscience, the book effortlessly blends the spiritual and the scientific, offering a comprehensive look at how DMT has shaped humanity's quest to understand the mind, consciousness, and even the universe itself.
What really stands out is Gallimore’s ability to make complex scientific concepts accessible while maintaining the awe and wonder that comes with exploring the unknown. 🧬✨

He doesn’t just present DMT as a chemical, but as a doorway—a pathway to understanding dimensions, consciousness, and the nature of reality. His exploration of the psychedelic experience will make you rethink what it means to be aware of the world around you.
Whether you’re a seasoned psychonaut or someone curious about the deeper layers of consciousness, Death by Astonishment offers both intellectual depth and a sense of wonder that’s hard to put down. 🌿

It’s a thought-provoking and eye-opening journey that asks: What if the mysteries of the universe are not only out there but also within us?

Highly recommend this one to anyone ready to expand their mind and challenge their perception of reality! 🔮
Profile Image for Thomas Stroemquist.
1,689 reviews149 followers
December 28, 2025
From the South America rainforests ancient times, medical research in its infancy to 50s and 60s psychedelia experimentation and modern synthesis and research, this is a great history text. The chapters/pieces on brain function and consciousness yet again reminds me of how many Oliver Sachs books I have yet to read. The ‘mystery’ of the seemingly simple DMT molecule is likewise absolutely fascinating - certainly the differences vs. The substances that are most tempting to compare with. As for the suggested truths behind the effects of it? I don’t know. Which is a huge thing for a dyed in the wool skeptic like myself. It’s an excellent primer and if you are the least bit curious, recommended. I’ll be sure to read some more on the topic.
68 reviews24 followers
August 2, 2025
Deeply fascinating exploration into the strange and wonderful realms of DMT. From the forests of the Amazon, to clinical trials taking place in the western world, Andrew Gallimore covers it all. Whilst I remain skeptical of some of his more speculative claims, I cant help but listen in awe and fascination and a little bit of horror at the worlds that may exist beyond our own
Profile Image for Felix Delong.
253 reviews9 followers
June 9, 2026
# Death by Astonishment, or: The Godlike Aliens Who Mostly Show Us Tablets

I wanted this book to convince me.

That is probably the most important place to begin. I am not coming at DMT as a materialist schoolteacher with a ruler, ready to smack the knuckles of anyone who says “entity.” I have done psychedelics. A lot. I have done DMT. I have had experiences that were astonishing, beautiful, terrifying, funny, sacred, alien, and emotionally convincing in the way only a serious psychedelic can be convincing. I have also tried, in my own limited way, to approach these states with protocols, experiments, questions, intentions, and the sincere hope that something genuinely exterior might answer back.

And yet: nothing.

No verifiable information. No telepathy. No clairvoyance. No mathematical theorem from the elves. No novel science. No unknown fact was later confirmed. No “here is the protein-folding solution, little mammal, write quickly.” Just astonishment. Immense astonishment, yes. Life-changing astonishment, perhaps. But astonishment is not evidence.

That is why I was excited for Andrew Gallimore’s *Death by Astonishment*. Gallimore is one of the most interesting thinkers in psychedelic neuroscience. His earlier work, especially *Reality Switch Technologies*, gave me exactly the kind of model I find compelling: the brain as a world-building machine, psychedelic molecules as tools that alter the construction of phenomenal reality, and DMT as one of the strangest “switches” we know of. This is great stuff. Cyber-Buddhist neuroscience with machine elves in the margins. I am absolutely here for it.

But the central suggestion of *Death by Astonishment* — that DMT may grant access to a genuinely external realm populated by discarnate intelligences of unimaginable wisdom and power — is where the book, for me, crosses from brave speculation into something much weaker: ontological inflation by vibe.

The problem is not that the DMT experience is unimpressive. The problem is that it is too impressive, and the book often mistakes impressiveness for evidence.

Again and again, we are told that the DMT entities are supremely intelligent, technologically advanced, powerful, ancient, alien, perhaps post-biological, perhaps operating from the substrate of spacetime itself. The language is thrilling. It makes the little ape brain activate the neuron. But after the smoke clears, one question remains:

What have they *actually* done?

If these beings are so intelligent, where is the intelligence? If they are such great teachers, what have they taught us? If they are advanced beyond human comprehension, why do they so often communicate like badly designed tutorial NPCs? If they possess unimaginable wisdom, why do they not seem able to transmit even one tiny scrap of verifiable, novel information?

The repeated pattern is almost comic. The entities urgently want to show us something. They hold up tablets, pads, control panels, glowing diagrams, jeweled boxes, impossible machinery, symbols, dials, sliders. They seem very excited. The psychonaut is also very excited. Everybody is excited. And then nothing intelligible comes through. We are told of “downloads,” but the download folder remains empty.

There is a recurring image in these reports of vastly advanced aliens using knobs, dials, sliders, tablets, and remote-control-like devices. This is supposed to suggest hypertechnology. But it often sounds suspiciously like the technological imagination of the person having the trip. One might gently ask whether beings who have migrated into the computational substrate of spacetime itself would still need a dashboard. Perhaps they are projecting something our poor primate minds can understand, sure. But that explanation can rescue anything. If the godlike alien uses a chrome iPad, it is because it is accommodating us. If it looks like a jester, it is because it is wearing a mask. If it behaves like a trickster, it is teaching us. If it tells us nothing, it is because we are not ready. If it gives no evidence, the absence of evidence is part of the mystery.

At some point, the theory becomes too comfortable. It can explain every outcome, including failure.

The book’s strongest move is also its weakest. Gallimore repeatedly argues, in effect, that the human brain should not know how to build DMT worlds. These realms are too strange, too coherent, too alien, too hyperdimensional, too full of ordered complexity. Therefore, perhaps the information is coming from elsewhere.

But this is exactly where Gallimore’s earlier work makes the counterargument for us. In *Reality Switch Technologies*, he explains in detail that the brain is always building world-models; that the normal waking world is not reality itself but a model constrained by sensory input; that psychedelics alter the structure and dynamics of this model, and they can do so even without the actual sensory input; and that the brain has access to a vast space of possible reality channels. This is the sober, elegant, powerful version of the idea. The brain is not a little camera passively recording the world. It is a reality creation engine.

So why, when the engine produces an especially weird reality, do we suddenly need an external broadcast?

Dreams already show that the brain can build worlds without current sensory input. Psychosis shows that the brain can generate agents, voices, plots, conspiracies, divine missions, and invisible persecutors with absolute conviction. Deliriants can populate the room with people who are not there. Ketamine can produce alien metaphysical operating systems and god-voices. Salvia can turn you into a wheel, a zipper, a page in a cosmic book, or a brick in the wall of existence. Artists, mystics, epileptics, monks, feverish children, grieving widows, schizophrenics, near-death-experiencers, and fantasy writers have generated impossible worlds for as long as there have been brains.

The DMT realm may be special. But “special” is not the same as “external.”

The existence of a coherent inner world does not require an outer world corresponding to it. The fact that a hallucinated tiger has teeth does not mean it left footprints in the carpet.

And when we look at the actual data, the case for a stable external DMT ecology becomes even thinner. Large naturalistic analyses show entity encounters are common, but not universal. One large study of thousands of online DMT reports found entities in less than half of the reports. Even when entities appear, they are not consistent in the way one would expect from a shared zoology. People report goddesses, aliens, mantids, clowns, elves, serpents, machine beings, dead relatives, angels, demons, guides, jesters, octopi, Jesus, the Virgin Mary, Mother Ayahuasca, animal spirits, chemical spirits, and God.

Sounds less like taxonomy and more like a mythology of particle-accelerator age.

The same goes for the environments. If DMT hyperspace were a stable external territory, we might expect some repeatable geography: the same gate, the same city, the same station, the same beings independently described by separate explorers. Instead, we get waiting rooms, alien laboratories, cosmic nurseries, jewelled palaces, hyperspatial circus tents, intestines of God, outer space, underground machinery, mazes, deserts, temples, impossible architecture, heavenly gardens, demonic clinics, and abstract geometric voids.

Again, this is fascinating. It may even be one of the most fascinating classes of experience human beings can have. But it looks far more like a generative visionary engine than a place.

The field-guide approach to DMT entities (see *The Illustrated Field Guide to DMT Entities*) unintentionally strengthens the skeptical case. The very diversity of the bestiary makes the “objective species” reading harder to maintain. Machine elves do not have a stable anatomy. Mantid beings vary wildly. “Elves” can mean Tolkien-like figures, self-transforming geometric balls, clowns, toy-like beings, engineers, tricksters, or something that simply resists naming. If this were biology, the field guide would be more Linnaeus and less “things that were screamingly present for four minutes and then dissolved into stained-glass mathematics.”

This does not mean the reports are worthless. Quite the opposite. They are psychologically, phenomenologically, and spiritually rich. They may tell us something profound about the mind. They may even tell us something about the deep structures by which minds generate worlds and social presences. But they do not tell us that an external realm exists.

The “supreme intelligence” claim is especially vulnerable. Intelligence is not measured by how stunned the observer feels. We do not judge a civilization’s sophistication by how confidently a terrified primate says, “Bro, it was so advanced. Trust me, bro.” We judge intelligence by output: problem-solving, communication, prediction, knowledge transfer, coherence, novelty, and power over the world.

By that standard, the DMT entities are strangely underemployed.

They do not solve our equations. They do not give us new physics. They do not provide unknown historical facts. They do not consistently describe a hidden target. They do not teach a new language with repeatable grammar. They do not give different participants the same verifiable map. They do not tell the next traveler, “Ask for Zorblax by the blue gate and he will give you the prime number we gave the last mammal.” They mostly gesture, radiate significance, perform impossible theatre, communicate universal love or vague warnings, and occasionally behave like cosmic border control.

The one (and sadly only one mentioned in the book) “power” sometimes attributed to them is the so-called DMT lockout: users reporting that, after overuse or disrespectful use, they can no longer “enter” the DMT space, as if barred by the entities. This is interesting, but it is very weak evidence for entity agency. It is largely anecdotal, often reported in contexts of heavy repeated use, and not demonstrated under controlled conditions with verified dosing, pharmacokinetics, set, setting, technique, purity, expectation, and physiological monitoring. It could be pharmacological. It could be psychological. It could be attentional. It could be fear, resistance, burnout, or a learned inability to surrender. It could even be a real phenomenon in need of explanation. But “the elves revoked my visa” should not be the first explanatory stop.

This is where the book sometimes feels, not dishonest exactly, but rhetorically over-eager. It knows how to present skepticism as unimaginative. It knows how to make materialism sound like a dreary nineteenth-century superstition, as though modern scientists still believe reality is made of tiny billiard balls of matter bonking into each other. But modern physics is already stranger than folk materialism. Quantum fields, spacetime, dark matter, black holes, entanglement, emergence, information theory — none of this requires us to treat every entity encountered under a powerful tryptamine as a literal alien intelligence.

The choice is not between “dead matter” and “machine elves are real.” There are many positions between those poles.

One can reject naive reductionism and still ask for evidence.

One can accept that consciousness is mysterious and still notice that the elves have not delivered the goods.

One can believe that the DMT state deserves serious study while also objecting when the book’s foreword by Graham Hancock moves rather briskly from “compelling mystery” to “how about thirty million dollars a year?”

That moment is honestly perfect. Before the entities have given us one verifiable sentence, we are already being invited to fund the embassy. I do not want to call this a scam. That would be too harsh, and I do not think Gallimore is acting in bad faith. But it does sometimes feel like grant-writing in a wizard robe. “We have not established that the realm is real, that the beings are external, that they are intelligent, that they can teach us anything, or that communication is possible. Therefore, what we need is a ten-year budget comparable to SETI.”

This is not how evidence works. This is how religions get buildings.

To be fair, Gallimore is often more careful than the bolder framing around the book suggests. He does not always claim certainty. He often says he does not know. He knows the hypothesis is contentious. He knows the data are incomplete. And I genuinely respect him for pushing research forward. The extended-state DMT work is worth doing. More careful phenomenology is worth doing. Controlled entity-contact experiments are worth doing. Hidden-target tests are worth doing. Linguistic studies are worth doing. If people claim to receive messages, let us test the messages. If entities claim knowledge, let us ask for knowledge. If there is a world, let us map it. If there are teachers, let us see what the class has learned.

But until then, the sober conclusion is simple:

DMT reveals something. It does not yet reveal what it claims to reveal.

It reveals that the human brain can generate, or tune into, experiences of staggering intensity and strangeness. It reveals that our ordinary world-model is not the only possible world-model. It reveals that agency, intelligence, geometry, mythology, emotion, and perception can fuse into forms so convincing that “hallucination” feels like an insult to the experience. It reveals that the mind contains doors we did not know were doors.

But it does not reveal a stable external realm. It does not reveal independently existing entities. It does not reveal supreme intelligence. It does not reveal unimaginable wisdom. Yet?
It reveals, above all, our own astonishing capacity to be astonished.

And that may be already enough.

We do not need to turn DMT into interdimensional SETI for it to matter. We do not need the entities to be objectively real for the encounters to be meaningful. We do not need to believe that the mantis surgeon exists outside the brain to study what it does inside the psyche. The experience can be profound, therapeutic, terrifying, sacred, and worthy of lifelong contemplation without being literal extraterrestrial diplomacy.

If future DMTx research produces verifiable information, I will happily change my mind. Truly. If the entities teach a new mathematics, identify hidden targets, independently repeat a map, or pass even a modest controlled test, I will be the first to say: all right, the jesters have earned their laboratory.

But until then, I remain in the boring but defensible position:

DMT hyperspace is as real as experience.
It is not yet real as geography.
The entities are as real as phenomena.
They are not yet real as persons.
And if they are gods, aliens, or post-biological superintelligences embedded in the substrate of spacetime, they should really consider sending a clearer email.
Profile Image for Jeffrey Powanda.
Author 1 book20 followers
September 9, 2025
A fascinating book on the history of dimethyltryptamine, a.k.a. DMT, a mysterious serotonergic hallucinogen of the tryptamine family that occurs naturally in many plants and animals, including humans.

Gallimore's book is broader and offers more history than Rick Strassman's groundbreaking book DMT: The Spirit Molecule, but I found that both books complement one another nicely. Strassman's book is good for its rigorous scientific approach and its trip reports. Gallimore's approach is less scientific, more journalistic. It also relies on neuroscience, explaining how your brain uses sensory data to model your world, and that model informs your dreams. But that’s not what’s happening under DMT, which swaps in another world, one radically different from the model your brain has constructed. Other psychedelics stimulate the brain, making the world seem fluid and dynamic, but still based on experiences from the waking world. The DMT world is entirely new and looks nothing like the waking world. Where is the strange, complex, and highly technological information for that new world's model coming from? The DMT experience can't be dismissed as a hallucination. It's something else entirely.

Gallimore stresses the importance of further DMT research; naturally he wants to study and understand the intelligent discarnate alien beings that visit nearly every DMT trip. What is their objective? Speculation about that cosmic mystery makes Gallimore’s book more like an H.P. Lovecraft novel or Budd Hopkins' Intruders, which is about alien abduction.

Of course, the most fascinating thing about DMT is that Western science is only recently catching up with the fact that Indigenous peoples of South America have been using DMT—through yopo or similar snuffs and by shaman-made brews such as ayahuasca—to communicate with
discarnate intelligent nonhuman beings for tens of thousands of years.

The book documents the experiences of many notable DMT researchers, including:
- English botanist Richard Spruce, who discovered the vine used in ayahuasca by indigenous cultures on an Amazonian expedition in 1852
- Beat writer, psychedelic enthusiast, and junky William S. Burroughs
- Dr. Richard Schultes, the father of ethnobotany, who failed to recognize the significance of Burroughs' discovery in 1942
- Dr. Stephen Szára, who conducted the first study of DMT in 1956 and discovered its uniquely visionary properties
- Dr. Rick Strassman, who conducted a landmark scientific study of the effects of DMT on nearly 60 volunteer subjects at University of New Mexico between 1990 and 1995
- Philosopher Terence McKenna, who warned of "death by astonishment" as the possible risk of trying DMT, thus inspiring the book’s title, popularized DMT within the drug counterculture in the 1990s, and gave Dr. Strassman his first hit of DMT
- Psychedelic researcher Dr. Timothy Leary
- Pharmacologist Harris Isbell, who conducted unethical drug tests on prison inmates in Lexington, Kentucky
- Dr. John E. Mack, who investigated the UFO abduction phenomenon, which is eerily similar to the experiences described in many DMT trips

Gallimore, a chemical pharmacologist, neurobiologist, and writer, as well as a pioneer in DMT research, is an eloquent and informative tour guide to the strange world of DMT. Since the 1960s, the secret of DMT, at least in the West, is out, and thousands of people have tried it. Unlike other psychedelics, it doesn't cause you to feel stoned or intoxicated. Instead, it replaces your world completely, catapulting you into a multidimensional realm populated by intelligent discarnate alien beings—including machine elves, insectoid creatures, clowns, lizards, and aliens (a.k.a., the Grays). As Gallimard describes it,
It was now abundantly clear that there was something very special—something seemingly miraculous—about this simplest of alkaloids scattered throughout the plant kingdom with unrivaled ability to rapidly and efficiently dismantle the world and replace it with one that transcended the imagination and the apparent limits of conceivable reality—to switch the brain's reality channel to a bizarre hypertechnological domain filled with advanced and thoroughly alien intelligent beings....DMT was beginning to look less like a drug and more and more like some kind of neuro-molecular technology. But a technology designed by whom and to what end?


It's that last question that leads Gallimore into some wildly speculative areas. It's quite possible that science may never be able to answer that question conclusively. But it's a stimulating journey just the same.

The book offers many photos, including of shamans preparing ayahuasca and artist renderings that attempt to capture the complexity, comedy, and strangeness of the DMT experience.

Gallimore has done many interviews on YouTube to promote his ideas, all based on the latest developments in neuroscience. In a recent interview, Gallimore discusses whether the things that people experience while on DMT trips are internal (i.e., hallucinations) or external (i.e., downloaded from another realm outside the brain): Are DMT experiences spiritual journeys or mind hallucinations? Fascinating yet enigmatic stuff.
2,085 reviews60 followers
May 11, 2025
My thanks to NetGalley and St. Martin's Press for an advance copy of this book that is book a biography of a very powerful way to open the mind, and a possible guide to a new future, one that involves investigations of both inner and outer space.

I have never been much for pharmaceuticals of really any kind. I don't even like aspirin. Growing up in a family of Bronx Irish Catholics I know I have addiction written on my DNA, so I find it is best to just say no to many things. I also have dealt with crippling depression for most of my life, and have been fascinated by the books that have covered psychedelics and other natural ways of finding out what is going on in the brain. As most therapies and even the few times I have taken antidepressants have failed, leaving me feeling much worse than before, I wonder about this drugs, drugs that have been used in rituals since the earliest days of man. So while i might abstain I have done a lot of reading, which I know doesn't equal experience. Few books though have left me so interested, and so confused about what to think as this one. Though I do think I am a better person after reading it. Death by Astonishment: Confronting the Mystery of the World's Strangest Drug by Andrew R. Gallimore is a book I am sure will divide many people, giving both a history of DMT, and what people might be opening, not just the doors of perception, but the doors to encounters with things that might defy our understanding.

The book is both a biography about the substance Dimethyltryptamine, better known as DMT, and its discovery by Western culture, and the strange visions that seem to be shared by many who try the drug. The book begins with different passages about indigenous tribes and their ceremonies, ceremonies that were kept from outsiders for quite a while. There are mentions of William Burroughs and his quest for the yage as he knew it. Descriptions of the diffferent ways the drug is used, processed and ingested. What comes clear is that many people who try DMT, both in the wild and in controlled settings seem to have visions of the same thing. Spiders which would be common as spiders make people uncomfortable, but places that seem similar. Conversations that seem the opposite of good things, and seem to portend of bad things coming. The book travels from the past to the present day, looking at how the study of DMT has changed, but how these visions might be of something that no one has really thought of. Creatures from a higher dimension, or one that we can't see, unless one is under the influence of DMT.

The book is a mix of From Beyond from H.P. Lovecraft and the movie by the same name, mixed with Altered States. What makes much of this information so interesting it the research that Gallimore has conducted. When I first read the foreward by Graham Hancock my neighbors probably felt my eyes roll in my head. Upon reading I found much of this very interesting, with lots of information that was new to me, and even as its oddest, I found myself able to suspend my disbelief. This book I am sure will fall into two camps, possibly even three I will happily put myself in the hmm I kind of want to know more.

Readers of Rick Strassman and Terence McKenna will get a lot out of this. I am sure there will be a lot of college bound kids who will get excited also. Veteran psychonauts will get quite a lot from this, and maybe add to their knowledge in different ways. Not a book for everyone, but one that will fascinate those that know, and even those new to knowing.
Profile Image for Michiel.
399 reviews95 followers
August 5, 2025
Ever since I followed his course on psychedelic neuroscience, I have been a great fan of Gallimore's ideas. Having read Alien Information Theory and Reality Switch Technologies, which were closer to strange textbooks from the future, this book is a more classical popular science. The first dozen or so chapters gave a fascinating overview of the anthropologists who tried to uncover the secrets of ayahuasca, the brew that allows communication with the gods. Gallimore is fond of referring to this as a technology (it requires both DMT as an active compound and an enzyme inhibitor to make it orally active). From this research, they discovered that smoking DMT would lead to a short, very intensive trip ("the businessman trip") that propels the user to a vivid, strange alternative reality filled with creatures that are called machine elves.

Now, it is clear the DMT is something of an enigma, even compared to the wonderous 'conventional' psychedelics:
- Normal doses create extremely potent, short trips for which there does not seem to be any tolerance effects;
- The hallucinations do not seem to be distorted versions of the reality we usually perceive, as is the case with LSD or magic mushrooms; it looks like one enters an entirely new universe.
- Despite this, the molecule is extremely simple (tryptophan with a little tweak), numerous plants contain it in large quantities, and even our bodies are biochemically equipped to produce it.

The intriguing thesis of this work is that the information generated during a DMT trip is not generated within, but rather allows for communicating with an external intelligence. This is without a doubt a provocative statement, which can be placed at the same level as the simulation hypothesis (interesting to think about when in a hot tub). It suits Gallimore that he does his homework and presents a well-reasoned argument. The most exciting part might be the very concrete experiments he proposes to allow psychonauts to be in a prolonged DMT state to explore the hyperspace.

The most interesting aspect of DMT is its wide variability and unique pharmacokinetic properties. It doesn't give access to new worlds, but it does provide access to new world models.
Profile Image for Red Goddess Reads.
139 reviews2 followers
July 13, 2025
WOW! First of all, my thanks to NetGalley and the publisher for allowing me a copy of the ARC audiobook in exchange for my honest review. I received this audiobook and didn’t really know what to expect going in. Typically, I like to read books about psychology and neuroscience, but knew nothing about DMT. This book had me fascinated and hooked by the end of the first chapter. Each chapter was just as awe inspiring, and by the end of each chapter I had more questions I wanted answered and then in the next chapter he would go into answering those questions which would lead to more questions….. The scientific data is crazy but the experiences of the users is unlike anything I have ever heard of. I am now going to go further down this rabbit hole looking into documentaries and other books but really this book is the most is so comprehensive and most up to date. Also, the authors voice is beautiful. I think if I had tried to read this in book form, it may have felt a little heavy, but because of the way it was read by the author, I felt that I was able to easily comprehend everything. HIGHLY RECOMMENDED #netgalley #deathbyastonishment
6 reviews
August 13, 2025
Death by Astonishment by Andrew Gallimore is part history lesson, part science briefing, and part mind-bending speculation on the role of psychedelics in human culture. Gallimore does a stellar job tracing humanity’s long relationship with plant-derived DMT, delivering rich historical details without falling into the trap of romanticized storytelling. I especially appreciated how he kept a clear line between fact and personal interpretation—he doesn’t just tell you when he’s speculating, he waves a flag and points at it.

The book also casts a wider net than just DMT, weaving in LSD and psilocybin to show the broader psychedelic tapestry. It’s refreshing to see an author so openly leaning into the future of research, especially in a field where curiosity often outruns funding.

If I had one wish, it would be for a deeper dive into the variations of the DMT molecule—particularly 5-MeO-DMT, which gets little more than a passing glance. That omission feels like leaving a fascinating chapter unopened. Still, for anyone curious about the past, present, and possible future of psychedelic science, this is an engaging and even-handed read.
Profile Image for Eric T. Voigt.
407 reviews14 followers
July 31, 2025
Full of trip reports, which you KNOW I love. Only one chapter got a little crazy, where he floated the theory that when someone enters the DMT state they're actively accessing another dimension of reality, as opposed to it just being stuff made up in their own mind. Though... how DO people come up with all that shit? I mean, people are constantly coming up with new things, right? Why shouldn't the imagination be expected to render ridiculously complex scenes under the influence of highly potent drugs? At least that's where I'm standing on it.
Profile Image for Nick.
24 reviews1 follower
January 10, 2026
An interesting read. The science stuff is really cool. Some great arguments for the DMT realm being a separate place. I do wonder about the argument that this realm is completely foreign to humans because the people's of the Amazon have been in relationship with them for thousands of years. I feel like the white privilege is leaking in. I look forward to what Psychedelic researchers continue to find out about these amazing medicines.
Profile Image for Brett.
30 reviews
January 15, 2026
First of all. Really well written. Sometimes I bow out of non-fiction but the structure and entertainment in the book is fantastic.
I would regard this as one of the most important books of our time.
The humility and impartiality of the approach is to be commended.
Wow… where do I go from here? The hooks are in!
Thank you so much for putting this out to the ‘universe’.
All the best.
12 reviews
September 6, 2025
Death by Astonishment is a captivating dive into the enigma of DMT, and I’m giving it a well-deserved 5 stars. As someone intrigued by DMT after hearing about it on podcasts, I was drawn to this book because of Gallimore’s academic credibility, which lends a unique legitimacy to his exploration of this mind-bending substance. His ability to combine rigorous science with profound philosophical questions makes this a must-read for anyone curious about consciousness, psychedelics, or the nature of reality.
Gallimore’s main focus is to unravel the mystery of DMT, tracing its history from its use in tribal rituals to its modern fascination among psychonauts. He delves into the provocative question of whether the vivid DMT realm—populated by entities and alternate realities—is a genuine dimension we tap into or merely a hallucination. What’s striking is his discussion of the consistent experiences reported across users, which challenges the dismissal of DMT visions as mere brain tricks. I found his theory that DMT might grant access to a real, alternate realm particularly compelling, as it resonated deeply with my own experiences.

His discussion of alternate realities felt like a validation of the profound sense of “otherness” I’ve experienced, making the book not just informative but personally transformative.
What sets this audiobook apart is Gallimore’s engaging narration. His passion shines through as he reads, making complex scientific and philosophical ideas accessible and gripping. Every section, from the historical context to the speculative theories, held my attention equally—I couldn’t pick a favorite. His clear, well-structured explanations ensured nothing felt confusing or out of place, which is a testament to his skill as both a scientist and a communicator.
This book earns its 5 stars for its seamless blend of science, history, and bold inquiry, coupled with its ability to resonate with my own DMT journeys. It’s a rare work that appeals to psychonauts, scientists, spiritual seekers, and anyone intrigued by aliens or psychedelics. However, its far-out concepts might be a stretch for those not ready to question reality itself. Reading Death by Astonishment has deepened my conviction that there’s an intelligence within the DMT realm and sparked a desire to explore further. Gallimore has not only illuminated the strangest drug but also challenged me to rethink the boundaries of consciousness. Highly recommended for the open-minded!
Profile Image for Zach Scoffield.
93 reviews
November 12, 2025
Good amount of well researched history and highly credentialed speculation, which is always a fun combo.

DMTx is some of the most wild current research on the frontiers of the mind and consciousness, and it will be interesting to see what we learn from it going forward.
Profile Image for Marcus.
139 reviews25 followers
May 12, 2026
I believe the notion "don't get high on your on supply" applies here. Dude has had one to many trips and came back bit NQR!
1 review
July 9, 2026
Comprehensive, without the excessive detail found Strassman's The Spirit Molecule.
Profile Image for Lucas.
101 reviews18 followers
May 8, 2026
if interested in DMT, it’s a must read

Gives a thorough history of DMT plus plenty of practical explanations of what it feels like, duration, experiments and so forth.

I could have used a bit less of the history, a bit more of trip explanations and a tad less of personal opinions by the author.

2 reviews
January 5, 2026
Simply a fascinating read. I cannot recommend this book enough. I come from a background of ”all drugs are bad” but this has got me to seriously think about that.

Read it and you will know what I mean!
Profile Image for Red Goddess Reads.
53 reviews8 followers
August 7, 2025
ALL THE STARS! Be sure to listen to this one on audiobook! Not only is the author‘s voice, simply dreamy, but I feel like I just took a college course more interesting more fascinating than anything I ever took in my school days. There is not a single moment I was bored or lost only endlessly fascinated!
Profile Image for Kara (Books.and.salt).
612 reviews45 followers
December 30, 2025
This was... not at all what I was expecting. There should be something on the cover pointing out that this book is about extra terrestrials, I thought I was going into a clinical exploration of DMT.
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