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Addiction in the '80s
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13828 |
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BOOK WORLD
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12 / 1988 |
1,649 Words |
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Nancy Dudley Nancy Dudley was a member of the White House Conference for a
Drug-Free America. |
POPPIES
Odyssey of an Opium Eater
Eric Detzer
San Francisco: Mercury House, 1988
170 pp., $8.95
THE ADDICTIVE PERSONALITY
Rituals and Recovery
Craig Nakken
Center City, Minnesota: Hazelden Foundation, 1988
Dist. by Harper & Row
128 pp., $7.95
Poppies is a wrenching personal account of author Eric Detzer's addiction to the euphoric effects of the opium poppy. Detzer sees himself as "the other kind of junkie," the kind who has an education, a good job, a wife, kids, and a lovely home. Detzer doesn't shoot heroin or rob people in the inner city at gunpoint. He swipes opium poppy plants from gardens in the Washington State countryside. He is convinced that no one is being hurt when he nods out in his living room from the effects of a homemade narcotic tea.
Detzer's story is built around his attempts to kick his opium habit. The reader is given a graphic view of the horrors of narcotic dependency. Fifty pages into the book, one feels safe in assuming that Detzer is just another self-centered ex-hippie caught in the downward spiral of addiction. But then, in the midst of his indulgent ramblings, the author stumbles onto a basic underlying truth about his own condition. The redeeming pearl of wisdom earned by grueling
... (1995 of 9741 Characters)
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