
Attribution
Frank OwenPublication Details
Book1st edSt. Martin’s Press2007Availability
LOCATION CALL # STATUS (LOWER LEVEL) HV5822.A5 O94 2007 AVAILABLE New Feature: Text this to your cellphone
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Description
Allied, Nazi, and Japanese soldiers used it throughout World War II, and the returning waves of veterans drove demand for meth into the burgeoning postwar suburbs, where it became the ?mother?s helper? (automatically summarized from Amazon.com)Subject
Notes
- Journalist Owen takes readers on a trip into the world(s) of methamphetamines, from the cook houses in rural and small-town Missouri to latter-day suppliers in Mexico to users across America. In this highly personal travelog of meth making, selling, using, and abusing, Owens shows how a little-known drug first popular with bikers and truckers became a national scourge. In doing so, he debunks many myths about meth addiction and supposed meth-induced antisocial and criminal behavior, and he tracks the ways law enforcement officials from the federal level to local police departments have tried first to make sense of the meth culture and then to stop the manufacture and sale of the drug. This is not a deeply scholarly study steeped in analysis so much as a ride through history and current policy.–Adapted from Library Journal review
Contents
- Introduction. Make me a machine
- 1. The rise of Nazi dope
- 2. The devil’s drug
- 3. Cooking crank with uncle Fester
- 4. A wonder drug is born
- 5. Chemical control
- 6. Meth capital of America
- 7. The kings of methamphetamine
- 8. Sex and the city
- 9. Mother’s little helper
- Epilogue. Epidemic? What epidemic?
ISBN
- 9780312356163
- 0312356161
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Open Library ID
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