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LSD & HALLUCINOGENS LITERATURESelected and annotated by Patrick the Lama
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Acid Dreams, by Martin A Lee and Bruce Shlain (1986)
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This well-received title was partly triggered by the availability of previously secret CIA files concerning the MK-ULTRA project during the 1950s. The authors build their full chronology around this remarkable material, with the chapters on what happened before and after being somewhat less impressive, often based exclusively on previously known works. Still, entertaining and with a cool attitude that undoubtedly help foster its popularity among newer generations of acidheads. 345 pp. Currently in print.http://www.levity.com/aciddreams/
Storming Heaven, by Jay Stevens (1987)
Stevens' thunder was partly stolen by Acid Dreams (above) which appeared shortly before and covers much of the same ground. This is clearly the better of the two, with a serious, confident tone that helps the reader realize the magnitude of the LSD revolution as one of the more important events of the 20th Century. Chapters on the founding fathers and early days (1930-50) are particularly impressive, with lots of unique source and interview material. This should remain the standardwork in the field. Used copies are easy to find on eBay. 416 pp. Currently in print.
Millbrook, by Art Kleps (1977)
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This book, by the founder of the Neo-American Church (registered in 1965 as the first acid religion anywhere), is a rather amazing roller-coaster ride detailing not only the bizarre menagerie and intrigues at Millbrook circa 1966-68, but also the unusual psychedelic-solipsist philosophy of the Chief Boo-Hoo. The book cannot be summarized in a few sentences but should be read by anyone interested in psychedelia. Not all of it is appealing, some of it lamentable, but on the whole Kleps appears like an inspired, hilarious and occasionally brilliant observer of people and their habits. Everyone including Kleps himself comes out looking like an egomaniac schmuck, though the sharpest poison is spared for Timothy Leary who seems to have been a spectre haunting Kleps solipsist dreams, judging by the amount of textual space spent on the mentor-turned-traitor. From a purely lysergic perspective Kleps deserves applause for his determination to describe and explain the LSD trip for what it is, not as a metaphor or part of "something else". Kleps passed away in 1999, 71 years old.
The original book is somewhat difficult to find, having not been reprinted after the first run in the mid-1970s. Both hardcover and softcover versions exist. No images. 355 pp.
I haven't ordered and can't vouch for it, but the Boo-Hoo Church or affiliated parties offer copies of the book via print-on-demand.
The Boo-Hoo Bible, by Art Kleps (1967-1972)
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This is Kleps' most famous work, a highly unorthodox "catechism" for his hallucinogen church consisting of an assortment of "Divine Toad Sweat" newsletters from the very earliest days (1965) and onwards as well as newspaper clippings, senate committee hearings, excerpts from law-books, and random essays on whatever was on Kleps' mind. It works well as a whole, and is an essential piece of psychedelic history, although one may wish that Kleps would have spent more time explaining the hows and whats of the acid trip (his true forte) and less on iconoclastic outbursts. His arch-nemesis Tim Leary contributes a double-edged appraisal of the book in an appendix. The contents differ between different editions of the book, which was first published as "The Neo-American Church Catechism" in 1967. Somewhat easier to find used than "Millbrook". 220 pp.
Ad in the L A Oracle, Summer 1967
LSD - My problem child, by Albert Hofmann (1980)
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The grandfather speaks. Original hardcover copies command high prices, but the softcover should be findable. There is now (2007) a new English translation available, with some recent photos added. Hofmann is an intelligent, dignified man with a lifelong openness to the mystical experience, despite his impressive scientific background. We're very fortunate that it was he and noone else who ran across the effects of derivative # 25 that legendary day many decades ago. And he's still around, now into his 2nd century. Essential reading. 210 pp.
The Varieties Of Psychedelic Experience, by REL Masters and Jean Houston (1966)
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One of the standard works of the field, a serious and well-written overview of all the various aspects of the LSD/peyote experience, presented via a series of descriptions of actual trips that were guided by the authors. Early enough to be free from borh cosmic new age-ness and square hysteria, yet late enough to present a sort of definite picture. Does not attempt to squeeze acid into some existing religious/psychoanalytic framework but takes it just for what it is, which means that the book has aged well, and indeed has been reprinted not long ago. Despite the academic tone, not without a sense of humor, and many of the trip reports are amazing. An impressive tome, and the book I would most recommend as reading prior to your first lysergic journey. 326 pp. Currently in print.
Psychedelic researcher
Jean Houston. Photo by
Don Snyder.
Psychedelic Art, by REL Masters and Jean Houston (1968)
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To this day the only book published on this crucial subject, a highly interesting work both for its visual and literary contents. The authors provide plenty of context and background for the psychedelic art scene of the time, linking it both to earlier art schools such as surrealism as well as to the direct impulses from the psychedelic experience. Several artists are presented with full color and black & white plates, although one might object to the use of the latter, as the colors are such a vital part of this art. Stanley Krippner expands on the acid aspect, while additional comments on the artists and the scene are given by Barry Schwartz, who also provides a very useful definition of the genre. The book is rather NYC-centric and manages to miss the west coast poster scene almost entirely, but since that has been covered so well elsewhere it's no great loss. I'm not sure how much success any of the LSD artists presented did achieve, and of course the scene as a whole never reached the lofty heights speculated upon in this book, which makes it seem more of an "underground" experience in retrospect. Never reprinted and somewhat hard to find. Hardcover with dj. 190 pp.
The Joyous Cosmology, by Alan Watts (1962)
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One of the classics of the field, with the legendary Alan Watts recounting lessons learned from his early 1960s LSD trips in a style just as eloquent as his famous radio lectures. Comparable to "The Doors Of Perception" but at least to me superior; less entangled in pre-existing learning and more open to the experience itself. Watts' conclusions from the LSD insights are surprising and individualistic, and do not necessarily conform to the Eastern-oriented school of thought he usually propagated. Contains a famous aural trip through a christian mass with organ music which is as good a summary of the acid experience as you can find. A must read, sort of like the Rolls Royce of trip journals. Illustrated with photographs of natural phenomena whose psychedelic nature is brought to light, cool concept. Original softcovers are fairly easy to find and sport an intro by Leary & Alpert from when they were just two renegade Harvard scientists. 94 pp.
Alan Watts also recorded a little known LP titled "This Is IT" around this time, which is of equally great significane. Read all about it and its connection to "The Joyous Cosmology" here.
LSD - The Consciousness Expanding Drug, edited by David Solomon (1964)
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This collection of essays and articles became one of the best-selling LSD books of the 1960s, and the later printings are easy to find. It was conceived at a time when psychedelic research was still mainly an academic concern for shrinks and MD:s, which means that the tone is rather dry and technical. However the list of contributors is very impressive: Aldous Huxley, Alan Watts, Timothy Leary, William Burroughs, Humphry Osmond (R.I.P); a virtual who's who of the original scene. Editor David Solomon went on to new adventures as author of "The Marihuana Papers" and hands-on involvement with the "Brotherhood Of Eternal Love" in the 1970s.
Ad for Solomon's book in
the Psychedelic Review #4 <clickable>
Golden Guide to Hallucinogenic Plants (1976)
Pretty unbelievable field guide in the well-known 1970s "Golden Guide" series, the difference being that this one covers hallucinogens. Made either as one of the most brilliantly subversive pranks of the era, or in all honesty by geek scientists unaware of the implications. Either way it's a must-have for any respectable drug library, and a beautiful little volume too with color drawings of psychedelic plants from all corners of the world and a learned text by renowned authority Richard Evans-Schultes. LSD and DMT are covered as well. Impossible to imagine happening today, and indeed too heavy even for the liberal 1970s, which caused its withdrawal and relative scarcity. The hardcover variant in bigger format is even rarer. The image above is clickable. 160pp, massively illustrated.
Moksha - Aldous Huxley's Classic Writings on Psychedelics and the Visionary Experience, edited by Michael Horowitz & Cynthia Palmer (1977)
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While Huxley's "Doors Of Perception" from 1954 is the single most famous book on the subject of hallucinogens, this anthology of essays, lectures and letters is a better introduction to both the field and Huxley himself. It appears that Huxley wrote "Doors" (and its sequel "Heaven & Hell") before his thoughts on the matter had fully developed, as they would in the late 1950s.
Some of the items in "Moksha" are truly brilliant and apart from being superior writings on the subjects of hallucinogenic drugs, personal freedom, and spiritual search, also show what a tremendous intelligence Huxley possessed. In addition to Huxley's own writings we also get selected pieces from Humphry Osmond, Tim Leary and Laura Huxley for intriguing glimpses of the man from the outside. Currently in print. 270 pp.
The Man Who Turned On The World, by Michael Hollingshead (1973)
British-born globetrotter Hollingshead is one of those enigmatic characters who appear at different places in psychedelic history, doing important work at crucial junctures, yet remain very hard to figure out. This autobiography covering the 1961-1970 years doesn't really offer much insights into the man himself, except a certain restlessness and recklessness not unlike that displayed by Art Kleps.
The first 1/3rd, detailing the embryonic years of wild research trips in New York and Boston is by far the best, well-written, clever and revelatory. Apart from his work in the Harvard circles (including giving Timothy Leary his first LSD trip), Hollingshead set up a New York-based project of his own together with Jean Houston, where lots of guided trips were performed and data gathered, forming the backbone for Houston's "Varieties Of Psychedelic Experience" (see above). This "Agora" project is not very well documented elsewhere, and alone makes the book worth reading.
As Hollingshead returns to England in 1965 the storyline becomes increasingly erratic. The very important work performed there as dozens of famous British artists and musicians were introduced to LSD is described in only vague terms, and based on Hollingshead's own testimony it may be that his heavy use of amphetamines means that he simply doesn't remember much. After he was busted he was sent to a British prison in 1966, from which the memories seem to be clearer and occasionally quite interesting, though the narrative is abruptly cut short.
Michael Hollingshead outside
the Harvard building where he
gave Tim Leary his first LSD trip.
Photo by Don Snyder... apologies
for the poor scan job.The last third of the book finds Hollingshead on the hippie trail, making stops in Norway, Tonga and Nepal and engaging in various local projects while getting stoned constantly. Visits with Tim Leary and the Brotherhood Of Eternal Love on the US westcoast could have been interesting but have a superficial, postcard-like feel. It all reads much like any backpacker memoir from the era and the ground-breaking, ahead of the pack nature of the early 1960s chapters is sadly missing, and the book as a whole sort of fizzles out. Hollingshead current whereabouts are (of course) shrouded in mystery, although it appears he may have died in South America in the late 1970s. He did write a few more things in the 1970s.
The book is a bit of a mess, with extensive quotes that have no attribution whatsoever, often not even author. Footnotes appear briefly on a few pages, then disappear again. There's also signs of poor proofreading. In any event, and despite the weak 2nd half, this book appears to be liked by many but is somewhat difficult to find. No images. 250pp.
Explorations In Awareness, by John W Aiken (1966)
Although John Aiken and his wife Louise have an obvious place in the psychedelic chronicles, their story is poorly documented. They were MD:s by profession and in the later years of their lives retired to New Mexico for spiritual research, with and without psychedelics. Art Kleps has credited their Church Of Awakening as being the very first non-Native American psychedelic church to be registered (1963), predating both Kleps and the Millbrookers by a couple of years.
This slender volume, sporting a great cover that looks like a 1950s exotica LP, is a delight to read. Obviously drawing on a vast array of ancient and modern sources, Aiken presents an esoteric doctrine of self-realization and ultimate transcendence, told in a pure, stripped-down style that displays selfconfidence and insight. It is not a rehash but a new psychedelic path, with vedic-yogic as well as Christian and Native American influences. The latter chapters contain a couple of trip reports, including one from a (presumed) Indian guru, who does a respectworthy attempt to squeeze the cosmologic-metaphysic experiences of an acid trip into plain English. Written mainly in 1963, Aiken's LSD vibe is very different from what would follow, and deserves much greater recognition. The book may require some search, although I was actually given a copy for free by a generous fellow traveler. 85pp. A few drawings.Aiken also appeared with an article in Fate magazine in 1963, discussed elsewhere on this website.
Aquarian Odyssey, by Don Snyder (1979)
This is one of the best photo books I've seen about the hippie era, a true delight for anyone wanting to understand what the Freak Revolution was really about. Snyder goes into some long, technical explanations about his method in the very interesting foreword; I only understand about half of it but the outcome is terrific. The colors are warm, the people seem very alive and present, and there's a sense of coherence. Many of the photos are obviously posed, yet done so in a way that looks very natural -- no small feat. The actual subjects is a mix of street freaks, occultists, rock'n'rollers, performance artists, and a host of famous scenemakers such as Ram Dass, Leary, the Dead, Allen Cohen, etc. The coverage is geographically divided between New York City (like shots inside the famous Electric Circus), rural communes in New England, and the San Francisco Bay Area.
Tim Leary at Millbrook.
Photo by Don Snyder.
There is a certain timelessness to the photos -- the people don't look like "60s" people as much as outsiders and explorers from pretty much any area. A lot of it could stem from 2007 as much as 1969. This is a pleasant change. The other thing one might notice is that there's a certain melancholy that permeates the volume, one which probably derives from it being a retrospective work, assembled in 1979 when the 60s and hippies were fading into the past. The book isn't too hard to find, and recommended. Color plates throughout. Unpaginated, c 110p.
Brotherhood Of Eternal Love, by Stewart Tendler & David May (1984 / 2007)
1984 edition
Something of a classic within LSD literature, this book was a hard-to-find collectable for many years, until the recent edition appeared (Cyan Books). Written by two British journalists, the main focus is on the LSD manufacture and distribution during 1965-1978. The Brotherhood of the title was a group of idealistic heads in Southern California who began distributing Owsley acid for free and within a few years found themselves in an international drug smuggling network. This story is fairly well-known (Rolling Stone wrote about them in the 70s), while the other main focus of this book is less well-documented; the British-based manufacture and dealing of LSD in the 1970s. A massive police effort called Operation Julie busted the whole scene open, and even led to a full-length movie. Overall LSD and hippie culture history is also covered in passing. The subject matter is interesting, but the writing is somewhat disengaged in a magazine fashion, and the cast of characters so massive that it's hard to keep track of who did what. Still, a vital read on the mid-period history of hallucinogens, when it became big business. 270 pages, with b & w photo section.
The Invisible Landscape, by Terence McKenna & Dennis McKenna (1975)
Terence McKenna should need no introduction to psychedelic explorers. Once introduced by Tim Leary as "the real Timothy Leary", McKenna became the great hallucinogen ring-leader from the late 1980s and onwards, thanks in no small part to his amazingly eloquent lecturing. The resurgence of psychedelic culture and research in the 1990s was facilitated by a break with the earlier (1950s-60s) era, a paradigm shift which was undoubtedly partly deliberate and to which McKenna contributed a great deal. One important aspect to the move forward was a re-focusing of the substance interest, from LSD to organic, shamanic highs such as psilocybin mushrooms, ayahuasca and DMT. This is the phase we're still in today (2007).
McKenna's first book, co-authored with his brother Dennis (b. 1950), is a rather dazzling read. Inspired by a life-altering trip experience in the Amazon jungle 1971, the authors come off somewhat like maverick graduate students. The book aspires to much, and takes a cross-scientific approach to launch a new view of consciousness and what we call reality. As with much of McKenna's work, there is a sense of scientific parody, or tricksterism, even as the formal and technical aspects of the theories are comprehensive. Taking various cutting edge (at the time) theories and discoveries from fields such as neurology, biochemistry, quantum science and stringing them together, a complex hypothesis about the relationship between organic plants, perception and evolution is presented. The technical sections occasionally can drag on, unless you're engaged in the field yourself, but the energy and barrier-breaking is compelling. The second part of the book details McKenna's "Time Wave Zero" theory, an extrapolation of hidden structures in the I-Ching which you can read more about on the Net. An appendix of Fortran computer program print-outs make for a charming retro feel today, but the work otherwise has aged well and is a must-read. 230 pp, some illustrations.
This review refers to the original 1975 edition (shown above); a later revision exists.
PS read more about an important early McKenna work here.
DMT - The Spirit Molecule, by Rick Strassman (2001)
First published in 2001, this is the most recent work to be featured in these pages, and it is indeed a modern classic within hallucinogen literature. After some skillful manouevring through the bureaucratic and legal mazes of US drug research, Strassman conducted the first formal academic study of D.M.T with human subjects in several decades. Not only that, but it was a major study with many dozens of research subjects, running for five years at the University of New Mexico. Strassman obviously belongs to the illuminated among us, and was fully aware of the further implications of his work, beyond the immediate neuro-biological and psychological interest. There is an obvious personal commitment to the work, which colors the tone of this book. Old enough to belong to the original hippie generation, the author occasionally displays a naiveté that some might assume we'd left behind us in the 1970s, although this doesn't really affect the central themes of the book. The unguarded honesty, both personal and professional, instead becomes an advantage as series of extraordinary DMT experiences are discussed, conclusions drawn, and methods refined. It is an impressive work research-wise, and the descriptions of the academic milieu and factors contrast nicely with the outlandish trip reports.
For the full story on DiMethylTrytpamine, generally recognized as the most powerful psychedelic in the world, you will have to look elsewhere. Putting Strassman's findings against the many other reports available (not least from Terence McKenna), there are some interesting differences. The "elf" encounter theme is less expressed, and instead it seems to be circus clowns, jesters and the ubiqutous insectile aliens that dominate the DMT reports. The differences can probably be explained, at least in part, by the clinical environment in which the experiments were performed. There are also reports of visits to other planets, travel through space and in time, death/rebirth experiences, and so on. DMT tends to generate more interesting trip reports than other hallucinogens, thanks partly to the condensed and intense nature of the experience, often producing a sense of wonder and marvel among readers... especially since so many experiences are similar in both structure, contents, and emotional tone. What can we make of the fact that so many different people report almost identical trips and encounters with beings and foreign dimensions under DMT ?
Rick Strassman offers no immediate answer to this very vital question, except for some loose speculation about dark matter and alternate dimensions towards the end of the book. Anyone hoping for "The Spirit Molecule" to solve the mystery of the DMT experience will be disappointed, and Strassman's conclusions seem more occupied with other issues. None or few of his research subjects displayed any marked change in their lifestyles or activities, despite the reportedly life-altering experiences they had had under DMT. Over time, the trip seems to fade away and become another memory. To this interesting finding one might object that all Strassman's subjects were experienced users of LSD, psilocybin and even DMT beforehand (this was a selection criteria), which means that they had already been through the main door, and had already changed their lives as much as they would. Adding some DMT trips on top of this background doesn't necessarily change much.
In any event, from this somewhat disappointing end result as well as a conflict with a local buddhist organization who disapproved of their member's work on hallucinogens, Strassman ended his long research project on a slightly disillusioned note, but the reader might feel that this is more connected to personal factors than the quality and outcome of the study, which is remarkable and important. After this project, Strassman took an interest in near-death research and alien abduction phenomena, both of which may be related to dimethyltryptamine, which occurs naturally in the brain; according to Strassman's theory DMT is produced or facilitated by the pineal gland.
This is a must-read, and comes with a very attractive Alex Grey-designed front cover. 350pp. The book is currently in-print and easy to find. You can even get a signed copy directly from the author.
Lysergic Acid Diethylamide and Mescaline in Experimental Psychiatry, edited by Louis Cholden, MD (1956)
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This slender volume is the earliest work listed in Peter Stafford's selective reading list of psychedelic literature, and of some historical importance. By and large it's a technical volume for branch professionals within psychiatry and psycho-pharmacology, but being LSD and being the 1950s, a tone of exploration and slight wonder creeps into many of the pieces. Rounding up about a dozen papers presented at the annual meeting of the American Psychiatric Association in Atlantic City on May 12 1955, several familiar names appear among the participants.
Dr R A Sandison who pioneered "psycholytic" therapy in London submits a charming 7-page article on his research, while Abram Hoffer gives a brief report from the massive psychedelic work conducted by him, Humphry Osmond et al up in Saskatchewan. To stir up some action, the APA had invited no one less than Aldous Huxley, whose "Mescaline And The Other World" (reprinted in 'Moksha') extends themes from his recent books on hallucinogens, and indicates where his future focus would lie, as heard on the later "Visionary Experience" LP lecture. I also found Charles Savage's piece on transactional aspects of LSD therapy very interesting, not least because it discusses the terms set and setting, much later made famous by Timothy Leary. Savage also displays what must be one of the earliest of psychedelic art in a printed book, and it comes complete with a psycho-analytic "explanation" of its meaning. See scans.
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Some of the other articles deal only with technical aspects, and there is a marked interest in the psycho-tomimetic approach to the mystery of schizophrenia, a line of research which was later abandoned since the similarities between the LSD trip and schizophrenia were superficial and inconclusive. Overall a very interesting peek into the early days of lysergic research. 82 pp, a few b & w illustrations.
Realms Of The Human Unconscious by Stanislav Grof (1975)
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Stanislav Grof is one of the major names in modern psychedelic research. Although his first work -- this -- wasn't published until the mid-1970s, his experience in the field reaches back to the early 1960s, when he was involved in some major psychiatric LSD studies in his native Czechoslovakia. Grof moved to the US in 1967 and continued his research, to the extent that the anti-psychedelic backlash allowed it.
"Realms Of The Human Unconscious" draws on a huge number of cases that Grof handled in his early research, to present a number of observations and theories that he developed from these. Detailed case reports are presented in a way similar to "The Varieties Of Psychedelic Experience" (see above), but these are also abstracted and generalized into Grof's ideas about consciousness. The main theory concerns pre-natal and birth experiences, which Grof feels are crucial to the subject's later development and, in some cases, psycho-pathology. Four different types of Basic Perinatal Matrices are identified and mapped against a number of clinical cases and LSD experiences. These "personality" scenarios are described as being played out over and over in life, especially in traumatic or difficult situations. Such a recurring structure is what Grof calls a COEX, or system of condensed experiences, which consists of layers of iterative and possibly self-reinforcing behavior patterns, which are tracable back in time, ultimately to the original birth or pre-birth trauma.
This may all sound more like Freudian psychodynamics than LSD research, and to whatever extent my summary above is accurate, these theories are the main product of Grof's book. However, from a purely psychedelic perspective, the individual case histories and Grof's initial observations about the nature and characteristics of the LSD experience, may be even more interesting than the psychological models he presents. The time and place provide several cases with an unusual content, as they draw on experiences from WWII and nazi occupation. As often, it's a valuable and often mindboggling read. It should be mentioned that Grof here worked according to the European psycholytic model, which means a series of LSD sessions using relatively small doses, as opposed to the American psychedelic model which works with very few (often just one) high-dose LSD experiences.
This is not a pop-science book, but seems to be aimed primarily at Grof's peers in the psychiatric community. The clinical tone may be off-putting to some, although the intelligence and clarity at play is refreshing. The scientific approach also thankfully rids us of the usual moralistic handwringing, and shows that much larger issues are at stake.
Grof would publish many more works in the field, but this classic work is a good place to start. 246 pp, lots of b & w illustrations (mainly therapy drawings). Reprinted several times.
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