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Substance Use & Abuse - Medical Aspects, Substance Use & Abuse
Last Opium Den by Nick Tosches β€” book cover

Last Opium Den

by Nick Tosches
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Overview

Nick Tosches trades civilization and its discontents for the possibility of one moment of pure bliss.

Driven by romantic, spiritual, and medicinal imperatives, Nick Tosches goes in search of something everyone tells him no longer exists: an opium den. From Europe to Hong Kong to Thailand to Cambodia, he hunts the Big Smoke, bewildered by its elusiveness and, despite the meaning it continues to evoke as a cultural touchstone, its alleged extinction. Weaving his spiritual and hallucinogenic quests together with inimitable, razor-sharp prose, Tosches's trip becomes a deeper meditation on what true fulfillment is and why no one bothers to look for it any more.

Synopsis

Nick Tosches trades civilization and its discontents for the possibility of one moment of pure bliss.

Driven by romantic, spiritual, and medicinal imperatives, Nick Tosches goes in search of something everyone tells him no longer exists: an opium den. From Europe to Hong Kong to Thailand to Cambodia, he hunts the Big Smoke, bewildered by its elusiveness and, despite the meaning it continues to evoke as a cultural touchstone, its alleged extinction. Weaving his spiritual and hallucinogenic quests together with inimitable, razor-sharp prose, Tosches's trip becomes a deeper meditation on what true fulfillment is and why no one bothers to look for it any more.

Publishers Weekly

In classic Tosches (Where Dead Voices Gather) fashion, the author offers an amazing recital of his around-the-world jaunt in search of the world's last opium den. His ostensible purpose is sound: a diabetic, he learns the drug was historically used as a salve for victims of the disease. But his truer, more urgent search is for those elusive, perhaps liminal, "brocade-curtained, velvet-cushioned places of luxurious decadence" and the smoky, ambrosiac paradise to be experienced there. The result of his investigation is the most comprehensive book on the drug since De Quincy's The Confessions of an English Opium-Eater. (Though Tosches does tell readers how to procure a book, not yet available in the West, that he claims handles the same subject matter to a greater, grander degree.) Recounting the drug's millennial history, and somewhat surprised to find that it's scarce nowadays, Tosches, a contributing editor at Vanity Fair, shuffles through the streets and overblown neon of Communist Hong Kong, escapes from Cambodian authorities under machine-gun fire, trips through a fellow epicurean's manse and private stash and, finally, wanders into a ratty Indochinese bungalow that contains, perhaps, the world's last opium den. Rich with political and historical digressions, the book also succeeds in pulling back the green curtain on connoisseurship, distinguishing between desire and need via the alternating lenses of discriminating taste and economic demand. Appropriately, once inside this narrative, readers will never notice how quickly the time has passed. Originally an article in Vanity Fair (where it purportedly received the biggest reader response of editor-in-chief Graydon Carter's tenure), the book's brevity will leave readers itching for another hit of Tosches's finely turned prose. (Jan.) Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.

About the Author, Nick Tosches

A journalist who has also written three novels, Nick Tosches is an acclaimed biographer whose unconventional books -- Dino and The Devil and Sonny Liston among them -- illuminate some of America's more controversial, overshadowed talents.

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

In classic Tosches (Where Dead Voices Gather) fashion, the author offers an amazing recital of his around-the-world jaunt in search of the world's last opium den. His ostensible purpose is sound: a diabetic, he learns the drug was historically used as a salve for victims of the disease. But his truer, more urgent search is for those elusive, perhaps liminal, "brocade-curtained, velvet-cushioned places of luxurious decadence" and the smoky, ambrosiac paradise to be experienced there. The result of his investigation is the most comprehensive book on the drug since De Quincy's The Confessions of an English Opium-Eater. (Though Tosches does tell readers how to procure a book, not yet available in the West, that he claims handles the same subject matter to a greater, grander degree.) Recounting the drug's millennial history, and somewhat surprised to find that it's scarce nowadays, Tosches, a contributing editor at Vanity Fair, shuffles through the streets and overblown neon of Communist Hong Kong, escapes from Cambodian authorities under machine-gun fire, trips through a fellow epicurean's manse and private stash and, finally, wanders into a ratty Indochinese bungalow that contains, perhaps, the world's last opium den. Rich with political and historical digressions, the book also succeeds in pulling back the green curtain on connoisseurship, distinguishing between desire and need via the alternating lenses of discriminating taste and economic demand. Appropriately, once inside this narrative, readers will never notice how quickly the time has passed. Originally an article in Vanity Fair (where it purportedly received the biggest reader response of editor-in-chief Graydon Carter's tenure), the book's brevity will leave readers itching for another hit of Tosches's finely turned prose. (Jan.) Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.

Book Details

Published
January 1, 2002
Publisher
Bloomsbury USA
Pages
96
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9781582342276

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