Acid Dreams: The Complete Social History of LSD: The CIA, the Sixties, and Beyond

by Martin A. Lee

Paperback, 1994

Status

Available

Call number

306.1

Publication

Grove Press (1994), Edition: Revised, 384 pages

Description

Acid Dreams is the complete social history of LSD and the counterculture it helped to define in the sixties. Martin Lee and Bruce Shlain's exhaustively researched and astonishing account -- part of it gleaned from secret government files -- tells how the CIA became obsessed with LSD as an espionage weapon during the early 1950s and launched a massive covert research program, in which countless unwitting citizens were used as guinea pigs. Though the CIA was intent on keeping the drug to itself, it ultimately couldn't prevent it from spreading into the popular culture; here LSD had a profound impact and helped spawn a political and social upheaval that changed the face of America. From the clandestine operations of the government to the escapades of Timothy Leary, Abbie Hoffman, Ken Kesey and his Merry Pranksters, Allen Ginsberg, and many others, Acid Dreams provides an important and entertaining account that goes to the heart of a turbulent period in our history. Book jacket.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member npbone
This book is about more than LSD. It's about society and the US Governments reaction to a changing social order.

Language

Original language

English

Original publication date

1985 (1e édition originale américaine, Grove Press)
1992 (Nouvelle édition américaine revue avec une nouvelle introduction d'Andrei Codrescu, Grove Weidenfeld)
1994 (1e traduction et édition française, Editions du Lézard)

Physical description

384 p.; 6 inches

ISBN

9780802130624
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