Cocaine: An Unauthorized Biography Book + PRICE WATCH * Amazon pricing is not included in price watch

Cocaine: An Unauthorized Biography Book

Cocaine, writes filmmaker Dominic Streatfeild, "is not some evil spawn of Satan but simply a commodity." Like other commodities, cocaine has a history. When the Spanish conquistadors came to South America and observed that Indians who chewed the leaves of Erythroxylon coca could, it seemed, march over the tallest mountain or through the densest forest for days on end, they knew they were onto something. The newcomers took to growing coca themselves, and in time their product found an audience outside the continent, with users such as Sigmund Freud, Ernest Shackleton (who "took Forced March cocaine tablets to Antarctica in 1909 for the energy boost they gave"), Duke Ellington, and, eventually, half of Hollywood to testify to its powers. Streatfeild's appropriately rapid narrative takes in such key moments and players as "the year of cocaine" 1969, when the film Easy Rider reintroduced the drug to American popular culture, and George Jung, whose exploits are chronicled in Ted Demme's film Blow, to create a portrait of the drug that ranges over centuries. Though he supports legalization, Streatfeild acknowledges the evil and corruption surrounding the trade. Drawing lessons from history, he also suggests the possibility that "cocaine will fizzle out in the year 2015 the way it did in the early twentieth century." At the close of this absorbing book, he adds, "It deserves to." --Gregory McNamee Read More

from£32.06 | RRP: £18.95
* Excludes Voucher Code Discount Also available Used from £13.71
  • Product Description

    On May 16th, 1499 Amerigo Vespucci set sail for the New World.Three months later, having navigated his way along the coastline of Brazil, he washed up on an idyllic desert island fifteen leagues from the mainland.There he was appalled to discover a tribe of hideous Indians, their mouths stuffed full of leaves "like beasts."The leaves were coca, source of the drug cocaine. Five hundred years later, the effects of the discovery are still felt.In 1999 South America produced 613,4000 tons of coca, with a potential yield of 765 tons of cocaine.Last year a United Nations report estimated that the global cocaine trade generated $92 billion per year - $20 billion more than the combined revenues of Microsoft, Kellogg's and McDonald's. For millennia, South Americans had used coca to cure everything from stomach maladies to snow blindness.Four hundred and fifty years before the civilized world discovered local anesthesia, the Incas were performing brain surgery using the numbing coca.For centuries conquistadors fed the Indians the leaves while they mined silver - fuelling the Spanish Empire while simultaneously decimating South America's population. And when cocaine hit Europe and North America it caught on there too.It was incorporated into drinks and tonics as a pick-me-up, including the most famous of all, Coca-Cola.The drug created waves of addicts around the world until it was banned in the early twentieth century. By the 1960s if was back, and has been creating all sorts of trouble ever since. Dominic Streatfeild examines the story of cocaine from its first medical uses to the worldwide chaos it causes today.His research takes him from the arcane reaches of the British Library to crack houses in New York to the jungles of Peru and Colombia.Along the way he speaks to some of the thousands involved in the trade: economists, scientists, botanists, lawmen, historians and traffickers, creating what is by far the most definitive history of a white powder worth more than its weight in gold.AUTHORBIO: Dominic Streatfeild is a documentary film producer and writer. He lives in London.

  • 0312286244
  • 9780312286248
  • Dominic Streatfeild
  • 4 September 2002
  • Griffin Trade Paperbacks
  • Hardcover (Book)
  • 528
  • American ed
As an Amazon Associate we earn from qualifying purchases. If you click through any of the links below and make a purchase we may earn a small commission (at no extra cost to you). Click here to learn more.

Would you like your name to appear with the review?

We will post your book review within a day or so as long as it meets our guidelines and terms and conditions. All reviews submitted become the licensed property of www.find-book.co.uk as written in our terms and conditions. None of your personal details will be passed on to any other third party.

All form fields are required.