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This Is Your Country on Drugs: The Secret History of Getting High in America [Kindle Edition]

Ryan Grim
4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (15 customer reviews)

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Book Description

Everything we know about drugs-from acid to epidemics to DARE and salvia-turns out to be wrong

Stock up on munchies and line up your water bottles: journalist Ryan Grim will take you on a cross-country tour of illicit drug use in the U.S.-from the agony (the huge DEA bust of an acid lab in an abandoned missile silo in Kansas) to the ecstasy (hallucinogens at raves and music festivals). Along the way, Grim discovers some surprising truths. Did anti-drug campaigns actually encourage more drug use? Did acid really disappear in the early 2000s? And did meth peak years ago? Did our Founding Fathers-or, better yet, their wives-get high just as much as we do?

  • Traces the evolution of United States's long and twisted relationship with drugs
  • Gives surprising answers to questions such as: how did heroin become popular, when did the meth epidemic peak, and has LSD gone the way of Quaaludes
  • Based on solid reporting and wide-ranging research-including surveys, reports, historical accounts, and more

Not since Eric Schlosser ventured underground to marijuana's black market in Reefer Madness has a reporter trained such a keen eye on drugs and culture. A powerful and often shocking history of one of our knottiest social and cultural problems, This is Your Country on Drugs leads you on a profound exploration of what it means to be an American.


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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Starred Review. Admitting that "so much has been written on drug use and American culture that it would take weeks to roll all of that paper up and smoke it," journalist Grim plunges into the counterculture, the literature, the research, the opposition, the pharmaceutical interests, the media coverage, the kids and users, the heroes and the hypocrites to chart the evolution of drug use in America, covering every illegal high, taking on well-entrenched myths and turning up fascinating stories on current trends-beginning with the end of LSD. Backed by plenty of startling facts (i.e., 1984's drug-related criminal population was 30,000; by 1991 it was more than 150,000), Grim fashions a sharp critique of anti-drug programs ("exposure to anti-drug ads led to higher rates of first-time drug use among certain groups, such as fourteen-to-sixteen year olds and whites") and other policy decisions (President Clinton's approval of NAFTA led to an unprecedented influx of drugs across the Mexican border). Grim isn't all talk, however: he barely survives on-site research during drug riots in Bolivia, goes through a typically fraught trip on ayahuasca, and scouts the battlefields of the fight to legalize cannabis ("In San Francisco, pot clubs quickly outnumbered McDonald's franchises"). This lively, personable history should strike fans of Martin Torgoff's Can't Find My Way Home as a worthy follow-up.

Review

* Admitting that “so much has been written on drug use and American culture that it would take weeks to roll all of that paper up and smoke it,” journalist Grim plunges into the counterculture, the literature, the research, the opposition, the pharmaceutical interests, the media coverage, the kids and users, the heroes and the hypocrites to chart the evolution of drug use in America, covering every illegal high, taking on well-entrenched myths and turning up fascinating stories on current trends—beginning with the end of LSD. Backed by plenty of startling facts (i.e., 1984's drug-related criminal population was 30,000; by 1991 it was more than 150,000), Grim fashions a sharp critique of anti-drug programs (“exposure to [anti-drug] ads led to higher rates of first-time drug use among certain groups, such as fourteen-to-sixteen year olds and whites”) and other policy decisions (President Clinton's approval of NAFTA led to an unprecedented influx of drugs across the Mexican border). Grim isn't all talk, however: he barely survives on-site research during drug riots in Bolivia, goes through a typically fraught trip on ayahuasca, and scouts the battlefields of the fight to legalize cannabis (“In San Francisco, pot clubs quickly outnumbered McDonald’s franchises”). This lively, personable history should strike fans of Martin Torgoff’s Can’t Find My Way Home as a worthy follow-up. (July) (Publishers Weekly, July 27, 2009)

"One of the theses of This Is Your Country on Drugs -- a cornucopia of unconventional wisdom about our relationship to mind-altering substances -- is that the popularity of drugs waxes and wanes according to a complex sum of factors." (salon.com, July 20, 2009)

"Mark Kleiman calls it "Atonishingly clear-headed and well-written, as if someone had taken David Courtwright and added just a splash of Hunter Thompson." (Mark Klieman, TPMCafe)

"A wide-ranging, fascinating romp through the history of America's insatiable appetite for all manner of drugs, from opium to crystal meth, all the way up to the possibly soon-to-be-illegal hallucinogen Salvia divinorum." (The Philadelphia City Paper)


Product Details

  • File Size: 503 KB
  • Print Length: 273 pages
  • Page Numbers Source ISBN: 0470643897
  • Publisher: Wiley; 1 edition (February 12, 2010)
  • Sold by: Amazon Digital Services, Inc.
  • Language: English
  • ASIN: B0038U0TMI
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
  • X-Ray: Not Enabled
  • Lending: Enabled
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #358,136 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
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Customer Reviews

4.6 out of 5 stars
(15)
4.6 out of 5 stars
Most Helpful Customer Reviews
38 of 40 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Read This...It Will Make You Feel Good June 29, 2009
By Traven
Format:Hardcover
Whether you've thought long and hard about the "War on Drugs" or never seen an episode of The Wire, this book will open your eyes and give you a fresh perspective. The research and historical bits alone are worth the price of admission (who knew coke was big in the 1890s or NAFTA allowed Mexican Meth to flow freely across the border?). What really sets this book apart, however, is the author's humor and willingness to include personal anecdotes in his story telling. Highly recommended.
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23 of 24 people found the following review helpful
Format:Hardcover
Ryan Grim started with a simple question: "Where did all the acid go?" and expanded it to examine our country's obsession with drugs. The research is extensive, and it is woven together with interesting prose that is both thought-provoking and, perhaps unfortunately, extremely funny. It is a thoroughly enjoyable read both for serious drug policy students and laypeople who are just interested in the history of our unofficial national pastime. Highly recommended.
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27 of 29 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Great read, but lax source attribution July 29, 2009
Format:Hardcover
This is an important, sweeping history and condemnation of the War on Drugs, full of real-world anecdotes and statistics to back up the premise that every time the government or prohibition movements manage to crack down on one substance, Americans shift to using another, making "progress" in prohibition impossible. The chapters on the hypocrisy of U.S. global policy vis-à-vis U.S. drug policy to be especially thought provoking--(e.g., evidence the CIA aided and abetted opium/heroin traffickers in Laos in the 60s-70s, aided and abetted cocaine traffickers in Latin America in the 80s by working with the Contras, and the U.S. military turning an intentional blind eye to opium use and trafficking in Afghanistan today--even though the narcotics trade funds the Taliban). As entertaining as it was informative, I found myself laughing out loud page after page.

My one fairly significant complaint is Mr. Grim's laissez-faire approach to source attribution. Although this book is brim-full of statistics, there are no footnotes, endnotes, or even a bibliography. The 250-page book is followed by a 3-page "Notes" section that provides references to major sources in only glancing detail, but without anything approaching the specificity a reader would need to go look up the source on one's own. I suspect this stems from Grim's background as a journalist: no one wants their newspaper all cluttered up with footnotes and parentheticals, of course. However, a serious academic endeavor such as a full-length book requires far more detailed source attribution. In the "Notes" section and at several points in the text, Grim writes that he will post links to sources--particularly the numerous studies from which he gleans his many statistics--on his website, [..], but as of this posting, he has not done so. My own experience and world view make me predisposed to agree with most of Grim's theories, but the lack of attribution leaves me skeptical: I fear that those who support the country's current drug policies will point to the lack of citation (as well as Grim's unapologetic narratives of his own drug experiences) to undercut the legitimacy of his argument, and that would be a shame.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
4.0 out of 5 stars This is your review on Caffeine
This Is Your Country on Drugs: The Secret History of Getting High in America by Ryan Grim

"This Is Your Country on Drugs... Read more
Published on February 3, 2011 by J. Gomez
5.0 out of 5 stars The 30,000' View of Insanity
This book starts out with two premises, both involve supply and demand, and which then shows us where we are today. Read more
Published on May 3, 2010 by Errol Icsel
5.0 out of 5 stars A Must Read
This book is filled with facts about America's love affair with alternative methods of medicines. If you want a history read it. Read more
Published on January 22, 2010 by Over Eons
5.0 out of 5 stars Hurray for this book!!
This book should be required reading for everyone in America.
The "war on drugs" is one of the most frustrating, fallacious, feckless and foolish money-sucking endeavors that... Read more
Published on December 23, 2009 by Laryca
5.0 out of 5 stars Comes from a journalist who challenges everything you knew about...
Ryan Grim's THIS IS YOUR COUNTRY ON DRUGS: THE SECRET HISTORY OF GETTING HIGH IN AMERICA comes from a journalist who challenges everything you knew about America's drug culture and... Read more
Published on October 13, 2009 by Midwest Book Review
5.0 out of 5 stars Very interesting read
This is an eye-opening book about the history of drug use in America and how our attitude toward drugs has evolved over the past 200+ years. Fascinating.
Published on August 29, 2009 by A. Moore
2.0 out of 5 stars Biased, with Little Useful Information
First my biases - I'm very negative towards behaviors associated with drug use (crime, child neglect, slovenliness, or even a laid-back approach to life), or ingesting, injecting... Read more
Published on August 19, 2009 by Loyd E. Eskildson
4.0 out of 5 stars Very enlightening read.
A very entertaining and well written book about the history of drug use and prohibition in the United States. Read more
Published on August 11, 2009 by Intrepid Reader
5.0 out of 5 stars Terrific read!
Not being especially tuned in to, or turned on by, legal or non-legal drugs, I thought I'd be reading an uninteresting book by a usually insightful writer. Was I wrong! Read more
Published on July 7, 2009 by Lita Smith-Mines
5.0 out of 5 stars Drug Sanity
Simply stated- this book needed to be written. Our country's relationship with drugs has been very complicated. Read more
Published on July 2, 2009 by Martin Povser
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