THE DOORS OF PERCEPTION by Aldous Huxley
    
        Huxley's classic from 1954, which sparked the
        rediscovery of psychedelics by a wide and varied
        audience. "There is nothing the pen of Huxley
        touches which it does not illuminate, and as the record
        of a highly civilised, brilliantly articulate man under
        the influence of an astonishing drug, The Doors of
        Perception is a tour de force."  The
        Daily Telegraph, London. ©Mrs. Laura Huxley
    
    THE JOYOUS COSMOLOGY by Alan W.
    Watts 
    
        One of the world's leading investigators of the
        psychology of religion evaluates the psychedelic
        experience both objectively and from the vantage of the
        author's own personal experiments. Foreword by Timothy
        Leary and Richard Alpert. HTML edition, table of contents
        and complete text, ©1962, 1970 by Pantheon Books. 
    
    LSD, MY PROBLEM CHILD by Albert
    Hofmann 
    
        Albert Hofmann, inventor of LSD and discoverer of
        psilocybin, the active principle of the "magic
        mushroom," recounts the history of his discoveries.
        HTML edition, table of contents and complete text, ©1980
        McGraw-Hill Book Company. Translated by Jonathan Ott from
        the German, LSDMein Sorgenkind, 1979
    
    THE ROAD TO ELEUSIS by Wasson,
    Hofmann, & Ruck 
    
        Acting on an insight into the true nature of the
        Mysteries of Eleusis, R. Gordon Wasson sought the
        collaboration of Albert Hofmann and Carl A.P. Ruck, a
        classical scholar specializing in Greek ethnobotany.
        Closely coordinating their research, the three
        scholar-scientists first offered documentation on the
        religious rites at an International Conference on
        Hallucinogenic Mushrooms in 1977. These astonishing
        findings, given here in a much expanded version, leave
        little doubt that the ancient secret of Eleusis has at
        last been unveiled. The HTML edition includes Table of
        Contents, Introduction and Chapter I. © 1978 by Harcourt
        Brace Jovanovich.
    
    THE SECRET CHIEF by Myron J.
    Stolaroff 
    
        "Conversations with a Pioneer of the Underground
        Psychedelic Therapy Movement" by Myron J. Stolaroff.
        The PROLOGUE to The Secret Chief by Stanislav
        Grof, M.D., is reproduced in The Psychedelic Library by
        permission of the publisher, The Multidisciplinary
        Association for Psychedelic Studies. ©1997 by Myron J.
        Stolaroff.
    
    THE NATURAL MIND by Andrew Weil 
    
        "The Natural Mind is one of the classics
        of consciousness investigation. Dr. Weil's emphasis that
        it is consciousness and intention that are primary in
        determining our response to drugs, rather than drug
        chemistry, is an insight we need today to determine a
        rational approach to drug use and abuse."
        Charles T. Tart, Ph.D. Preface to the revised
        edition and Chapter 1 reproduced in The Psychedelic
        Library by permission of the author. ©1972, 1986 by
        Andrew Weil.
    
    THE MARIJUANA
    SMOKERS by Erich Goode 
    
        "This timely and dispassionate bookbased on
        a survey of 200 marijuana users and on thousands of
        man-hours spent in direct observationportrays the
        marijuana phenomenon as it actually is. Dr. Goode
        convincingly shows how misconceptions and widespread
        fears over the morals and life styles of drug users have
        hindered an enlightened understanding of the use and
        effects of marijuana." Published in 1970, this book
        has withstood the test of time and remains one of the
        most important works on the subject. The complete text is
        available here by permission of the author.
    
    HIGH
    CULTURE: MARIJUANA IN THE LIVES OF AMERICANS by William Novak
    
    
        A classic text on marijuana and its effects on normal
        everyday Americans by a jouranlist and reviewer whose
        work has appeared in many well-known publications, and
        has been an editor and teacher of writing at Tufts
        University. The complete text available here by
        permission of the author.
    
    ON BEING STONED
    by Charles T. Tart 
    
        "A Psychological Study of Marijuana
        Intoxication" was published in 1971 and remains a
        most important source of information for both
        professionals and the general public. With the recently
        escalating debate concerning government intransigence on
        the medical marijuana issue, On Being Stoned
        appears in The Psychedelic Library as a valuable antidote
        to misinformation and hysteria. The complete text is
        available here by permission of the author. ©1971 by
        Science and Behavior Books.
    
    DRUG, SET, AND SETTING by Norman E.
    Zinberg 
    
        "This is a major work, by one of the world's
        leading experts on drug use and abuse. It is a book full
        of insights. Zinberg has provided us with a candid report
        on the reality of drug use in some of its most common
        features. By concentrating on the human dimensions of
        controlled use, he has etched in remarkably revealing
        detail the broad spectrum of use within which abuse may
        be better understood and more accurately defined."
        Arnold S. Trebach. ©1984 Yale University
    
    THE MYTH OF ADDICTION
       and DRUGSPEAK
        by John Booth Davies 
    
    "The Myth of Addiction is an immensely readable, provocative text which is fast becoming a
        classic. It is a book which anyone aspiring to present a new structure to explain
        drug use must take into account. As a result of the publication of The Myth
        of Addiciton, it is no longer possible to talk the language of addictiondisease,
        having to have, compulsion, loss of control, expurgation of guiltwithout sensing
        the presence of John Davies looking on and forcing the question, 'what exactly do I think I am
        trying to explain?'" Douglas Cameron, University of Leicester.
        Second edition, ©1997 by OPA, Harwood Academic Publishers.
    
    THE MEANING OF
    ADDICTION by Stanton Peele 
    
        The Meaning of Addiction presents an entire
        non-reductive, experiential model of addiction. It is the
        standard reference showing that addiction can never be
        resolved to its biochemical components, as the NIDA and
        NIMH are currently attempting to prove. "Stanton
        Peele writes so clearly and cogently that his scholarship
        and erudition remain continuously intriguing, adding to
        the readability of a volume that will become a classic
        contribution to the field." (Jules Masserman, Past
        President, American Psychiatric Association.) ©1985 by
        D.C. Heath and Company
    
    DRUGS AND
    RIGHTS by Douglas N. Husak 
    
        "This timely and important book is the first
        serious work of philosophy to address the question: Do
        adults have a moral right to use drugs for recreational
        purposes? Many critics of the 'war on drugs' denounce law
        enforcement as counterproductive and ineffective. Douglas
        Husak argues that the 'war on drugs' violates the moral
        rights of adults who want to use drugs for pleasure and
        that criminal laws against such use are incompatible with
        moral rights." Cambridge Studies in Philosophy and
        Public Policy, ©1992 by Cambridge University Press
    
    RELIGIONS, VALUES, AND
    PEAK-EXPERIENCES by Abraham H. Maslow 
    
        "Traditionally, religion has been of the spirit;
        science, of the body; and there has been a wide
        philosophic gulf between the knowlege of the body and the
        knowledge of the spirit. The natural sciences and
        religion have generally been considered as natural and
        eternal opponents. Abraham H. Maslow here articulates one
        of his prominent theses: the "religious"
        experience is a rightful subject for scientific
        investigation and speculation and, conversely, the
        "scientific community" will see its work
        enhanced by acknowledging and studying the species-wide
        need for spiritual expression which, in so many forms, is
        at the heart of "peak-experiences" reached by
        healthy, fully functioning persons."
    
    STATES OF
    CONSCIOUSNESS by Charles T. Tart 
    
        Stanislav Grof said of this book, "A beautiful
        piece of work on the theory of Altered States of
        Consciousness that will become a classic in the
        field." First published in 1975, States of
        Consciousness appears in The Psychedelic Library by
        permission of the author. ©1975 by Charles T. Tart.
    
    THE FORBIDDEN GAME by Brian Inglis
    
    
        "A Social History of Drugs" by Brian Inglis.
        One of the book's recurring themes is that Prohibition
        has always led to an increase of drug consmption, coupled
        with an increase in corruption and crime. A classic of
        the Anti-Prohibition Literature, the author also wrote
        one of the best accounts of The Opium War. 
    
    THE CENTER OF THE UNIVERSE by
    William S. Moxley 
    
        "A Theory of Psychedelic Experience" by
        William S. Moxley. Drawing upon recent research in many
        fields of study, this work represents the first
        multi-disciplinary theory attempting to define the
        nature, cause, roots, and future of psychedelic
        experience. Published for the first time in the Drug
        Reform Coordination Network Internet Library. HTML
        edition, copyright 1996 WSM. 
    
    THE PRIVATE SEA: LSD AND THE SEARCH
    FOR GOD by William Braden 
    
        Published in 1967, Albert Hofmann wrote of this book,
        "...a true intellectual pleasure...you certainly
        penetrated deeply into the roots of the LSD problem and
        have presented its many-sided aspects and its
        relationship to present intellectual trends well and with
        a thorough knowledge of the subject." 
    
    LSD  THE PROBLEM-SOLVING
    PSYCHEDELIC by Peter Stafford & Bonnie Golightly 
    
        Published in 1967. "Unless I have completely
        misunderstood the message, this book must be looked upon
        as a manifesto from one generation to anotherfrom
        the young to their elders. As I see it, the younger
        generation is telling us that it proposes to use
        psychedelics because it considers them appropriate
        instruments for living in the hurricane's eye of
        accelerating change. These young people consider that it
        is neither possible nor desirable to prevent them from
        employing these substances in this way, and in fact they
        are challenging lawmakers, law givers and law enforcers
        to stop them." Humphrey Osmond, from the
        preface. 
    
    HIGH IN AMERICA by Patrick
    Anderson 
    
        "The True Story Behind NORML and the Politics of
        Marijuana". Published by The Viking Press, New York,
        ©1981 by Patrick Anderson. Reproduced in The Psychedelic
        Library with the permission of the author. 
    
            HENRY HYDE ON DRUGS by Dennis Bernstein and Leslie Kean 
		    
		        Chapter 5 of Henry Hyde's Moral Universe: Where More than Time and Space are Warped
		         Common Courage Press, 1999. "Henry Hyde played a significant role in creating public confusion about Contra
		         trafficking and ultimately steering the IranContra Committees away from a serious investigation of this highly volatile
		         subject that goes right to the heart of U.S. national security."
	    
    THE MAN WHO TURNED ON THE WORLD by Michael Hollingshead 
    
        Published by Blond & Briggs, Ltd., 1973. The
        autobiography of one of the legendary figures in the
        history of the psychedelic rediscovery, who in 1962
        introduced the Harvard researchers to LSD. An
        unaccountably scarce book. 
    
    THE BROTHERHOOD OF ETERNAL LOVE by Stewart Tendler & David May
    
    "Born in the psychedelic Californian counter-culture of the 1960s, the Brotherhood and its allies were going to
    transform the world with LSD." And so they did, but not as originallty conceived... Although this study contains no
    small number of inaccuracies, and is unreferenced, it nevertheless provides valuable inside views of the 1960s not available
    elsewhere. A rare book.
    THE SEARCH FOR THE MANCHURIAN
    CANDIDATE by John Marks 
    
        Published by Times Books in 1979. The extraordinary
        story, compiled from documents released under the Freedom
        of Information Act, of how the CIA conducted a series of
        secret programs to find ways to control human behavior.
        Marks' investigation reveals that the Agency was deeply
        involved in research with psychoactive drugs,
        psycho-surgery, electroshock, hypnosis and other methods
        on Agency operatives, students, mental patients,
        defectors, prisoners and prostitutes; many of these
        subjects were unwitting or involuntary collaborators.