The Pursuit of Oblivion by Richard Davenport-Hines, Weidenfeld & Nicolson, £20, ISBN 0297643754
DO YOU KNOW a precocious teenager who’s reading Thomas De Quincey’s Confessions of an English Opium Eater for the glamour and parent-scaring value? Give them The Pursuit of Oblivion. That should keep them quiet for a while.
The book’s refrain is that the prohibition of mind-altering substances has been foisted on the world by American governments in a form of cultural imperialism. However, Davenport-Hines never quite remembers to explain America’s urge to purge. He blames cheap journalism, but scare stories can only feed existing fear. Leaving aside paranoia, the closest he gets is Richard Nixon’s pronouncement: “To erase the grim legacy of Woodstock, we need a total war against drugs.” That music festival was by all accounts quite pleasurable – so is this radical Puritanism? No pleasure without pain, and if you try for pleasure alone, the Puritans will supply the pain.
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This social and political history is sometimes highly entertaining in the social aspect and often deeply somniferous in the political. A safe alternative to drugs.