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Encyclopedia Of Psychoactive Substances

Richard Rudgley

8 Reviews

Rated 0

Reference works

*An accessible and vastly entertaining book on drugs from Ecstasy to caffeine via toad-spittle.

Despite great public interest in the use and abuse of psychoactive substances this is the first comprehensive and reliable book on this fascinating and controversial topic. The encyclopedia covers the entire range of naturally occurring psychoactive species, and also a great number of man-made synthetic drugs and compounds. It explores the use of intoxicating plants by Neanderthal man through to the role of hallucinogens and narcotics in contemporary youth culture. It provides basic details on the botany and chemistry of intoxicants, and examines their influence at all levels of our culture and society. The book also tackles controversial issues such as legalisation and details the legal classification of illicit substances alongside additional relevant information on detection, prevention, punishment and other criminological subjects.

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Praise for Encyclopedia Of Psychoactive Substances

  • Fascinating - LOADED

  • ... tobacco, ground beetles, glue, coffee, Prozac and so on ... Rudgley concentrates with startling results, on the history of the use of such substances - GUARDIAN

  • a enjoyable anthology of drugs, from opium and LSD to giraffe livers. - MARIE CLAIRE

  • A thorough and entertaining reference text - NEW SCIENTIST

  • Formidable ... Rudgley's curiosity, distilled concentration, inter-disciplinary connectiveness, deadpan humour, prodigious reading, magpie eclecticism and anecdotal ease are all massively appealing - EVENING STANDARD

  • This really is a fun read ... there are great little bits of information, such as the one about Eton schoolboys being flogged in the 17th century if they forgot to bring their tobacco pipes to school - Will Self, NEW STATESMAN

  • Will deeply satisfy the curious ... impressive - Nicholas Lezard, MODERN REVIEW

  • Fascinating ... Suddenly, clubland seems tame - ESQUIRE

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