Someone should actually write an exciting history about the opium war(s). Because I am STRUGGLING to find something, and there's so many interesting themes to work with.
Originally written in the 70s, with an updated preface, this book holds up ok. Most interesting chapters were on racism and the "Yellow Peril", and how opium impacted China - American trade policies. It's a good pre-read to "Dreamland".
First, this is weird and I've never seen it before in mainstream paperback or hardcover: toward the back of the book three pages of an earlier chapter (9, Yellow Peril) crashed into the last chapter (The Cure), and displaced about 50 pages. I thought I'd lost my mind.
Overall, to be taken with a grain (or lick) of salt given the author/editors' pedigrees (High Times magazine etc.).
I enjoyed the way opium is used as vehicle to show how money and power shape and choke the lives of the ordinary and elites alike. No real surprises if you've been reading and paying a bit of attention to the war on drugs/poor.
I would recommend if you are thirsty for the counterculture, and especially if you are a sheltered history buff.
Caveat-I am a person in recovery and work with addicts. I read this with an eye toward some professional enlightenment as well. Didn't exactly find it, but mostly enjoyed it.
Excellent book covering the history of opium, liberally infused with antidotes from writers through the ages as well as challenging evidence against the wisdom of present day drug enforcement agencies.
Exasperating chronicle of willful ignorance and culpable greed on view in the history of opium and its various derivatives. Perhaps more detail than I really wanted, but still worth listening to. Confirms my sense that the "war on drugs" has been a useless political charade, one more incident in a long history of classism which normalizes drug use among the wealthy while demonizing cheaper varieties used by the poor and/or "outsiders," ie, racially othered. Didn't know that McCarthy was a morphine addict (along with alcohol) in later life, supplied by the head of the federal narcotics agency.
One of the worst books I ever read. Authors are rambling through the history of dope use through the past few millennia as if no one knew that. Their conclusion at the end of the book proposes an idiotic notion that the best way to deal with drug addiction is to ignore it and hide it under the rug. They apparently had no clue as to the pain and misery what it brings to the loved ones.
Message to be taken: if you want something to spread, make it illegal. Make it illegal and it becomes rare. Something rare is a thing expensive. Expensive things attract insatiable businessman. And this businessman creates new markets, even at the end of the world. So it goes spreading.
It is very important to read the new introduction to this book because it was originally published in the seventies. Naturally, attitudes have changed, new treatments have been developed, and many theories have been modified or rejected. Otherwise the background and history of the opium trade around the world was fascinating. As was the way in which opium as well as other drugs such as alcohol, hashish, etc. were viewed by different cultures was insightful.
Excellent book. Not sure why people don't like it. Maybe because it includes a convincing argument that the wealth and power of the South Eastern United States (stronghold of the Christian Right) was made possible by the first global wave of opium addiction?
Longer, more comprehensive, and more colorful than John H. Halpern's Opium: How an Ancient Flower Shaped and Poisoned Our World, but also noticeably more dated (1981 vs. 2019) and for reasons that are hard to pin down, Flowers in the Blood feels less reliable than Opium. Both feel dated compared to Ben Westhoff's Fentanyl, Inc..