|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
2 Reviews
|
Average Customer Review
Share your thoughts with other customers
Create your own review
|
|
Most Helpful First | Newest First
|
|
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
This book deserves 10 stars.***..Good history account!!,
By Guy F. Airey "The Chemist" (San Antonio, TX USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Dark Paradise: A History of Opiate Addiction in America (Paperback)
The author, David Courtwright, provides an updated, historical account of one of the most puzzling questions on the American frontier: how did the drug (opium) addiction get so bad here-- so quickly. Then, he fine tunes his answer with another in which he describes the absolutely harsh laws, fines, and imprisonment of those who become caught in the law enforcement cycle of addiction. He shows quite clearly how doctors and politics played sessions of sanctioning, then criminalizing some of those who played this wheel of misfortune and are still spinning in it. One person "gets" 15 years for a first offense !!! It is written quite directly and to the point, in a reader- friendly fashion, and most everyone I know would enjoy his writing method. Propaganda, lies, exaggerations are used by our government to seeingly make these wonderful medicines, a social vampire. The author is patient and almost penitent in showing how society is punished much of the same way the addicts are for their wrongdoings In an wonderful plant meant to help for chronic pain and suffering for thousands of years, we have demonized it to the point of making it a menace. In that irony, there is no justification. Very little is mentioned of the FDA or DEA and it documeted very nicely. The notes in the back are FANTASTIC!! guyairey
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Omissions,
By
This review is from: Dark Paradise: A History of Opiate Addiction in America (Paperback)
This original and pioneering study, which first appeared nearly thirty years ago, is still important, worthwhile, and necessary for anyone concerned with the issues discussed. Yet what disappointed then continues to do so.
The author is somewhat inconsistent in his use and evaluation of indirect and inferential evidence. He notes that official statistics are notoriously inaccurate and misleading when it comes to drug addiction. And remarks that this is nearly as true now as it was a century ago. As a corrective, he judiciously presents journalistic and epistolary examples to underscore his position. This inspired reliance on non-traditional sources adds a lot of depth and strength to the book. It is likely that a more thorough examination of non-quanitative source material would have enhanced the discussion of opiate addiction among Civil War veterans. The so-called Army Disease was chiefly the result of widespread medical and non-medical use of opiates among those mobilized North and South, the total being close to three million, or nearly ten percent of the US population in 1860. The author neither ignores nor dismisses this, but I think he errs on the side of caution in judging the effects. Reliance on opiates during the war was widespread and profligate. In addition to prescription by military surgeons and corpsmen, opiates were also distributed by volunteers working for the NGOs of the day in hospitals and in the field. The merchants who accompanied the armies to sell GIs tobacco, newspapers, and stationery were also sources of "patent medicines" with high opiate content. The everyday hardships endured by enlisted men and officers were by any standard titanic. It would be unwise to underestimate the shattered physical and mental condition of many of these survivors. In the small towns and villages to which the veterans returned, there was available an impressive range of opiate-based medications. For those without the resources to obtain these through a physician, there was easy access through over-the-counter purchase. The temptation to self-medicate must have been considerable. Small town Protestant America was then subjected to the enormous moral and peer influences of the Temperance Movement: Opprobrium might be directed at the barfly, but not at a consumer of Soothing Syrup, especially at a time when opiate addiction was itself somewhat of a mystery. And even more so if that consumer was a venerated, decorated, and sympathetic veteran. Especially in the North, veterans enjoyed status and prestige. Hence their medications of choice likely had a sort of halo-effect, providing a celebrity endorsement for family, friends, and neighbors seeking a non-alcoholic buzz. Opiate addiction at this time may have been considerably less class-specific than the author maintains. And likely far more widespread. Informed conjecture is perforce necessary when confronted with fragmentary and unreliable official reporting. I hope that in the next edition there is more spadework undertaken to reveal correspondence, diaries, and popular literature concerning this question. |
|
Most Helpful First | Newest First
|
|
Dark Paradise: A History of Opiate Addiction in America by David T. Courtwright (Paperback - May 31, 2001)
$34.00 $32.64
In Stock | ||