Rating: ****
Tags: Gardening, Herbs, Essays & Narratives, Social Science, Popular Culture, Body; Mind & Spirit, Entheogens & Visionary Substances, Lang:en
Publisher: Feral House
Added: May 26, 2021
Modified: November 5, 2021
Summary
"Contrary to general belief, there is no federal law
against growing P. somniferum."—
Martha Stewart Living "Regarded as 'God's own
medicine,' preparations of opium were as common in the
Victorian medicine cabinet as aspirin is in ours. As late as
1915, pamphlets issued by the U.S. Department of Agriculture
were still mentioning opium poppies as a good cash crop for
northern farmers. Well into this century, Russian, Greek, and
Arab immigrants in America have used poppy-head tea as a mild
sedative and a remedy for headaches, muscle pain, cough, and
diarrhea. During the Civil War, gardeners in the South were
encouraged to plant opium for the war effort, in order to
ensure a supply of painkillers for the Confederate Army. What
Hogshire has done is to excavate this vernacular knowledge
and then publish it to the world—in how-to form, with
recipes."— Michael Pollan First published fifteen years
ago,
Opium for the Masses instantly became a national
phenomenon. Michael Pollan wrote a lengthy feature ("Opium,
made easy") about Jim Hogshire in
Harper’s Magazine , amazed that the common
plant, P. somniferum, or opium poppies, which grows wild in
many states and is available at crafts and hobby stores and
nurseries, could also be made into a drinkable tea that acts
in a way similar to codeine or Vicodin. With
Opium for the Masses as their guide, Americans can
learn how to supplement their own medicine chest with natural
and legal pain medicine, without costly and difficult trips
to the doctor and pharmacy. **