cover image Pills-A-Go-Go: A Fiendish Investigation Into Pill Marketing, Art, History & Consumption

Pills-A-Go-Go: A Fiendish Investigation Into Pill Marketing, Art, History & Consumption

Jim Hogshire. Feral House, $16.95 (320pp) ISBN 978-0-922915-53-8

As the editor of an eponymous underground 'zine devoted to celebrating pills ""from the point of view of unrepentant drug takers,"" Hogshire seeks to demystify the contents of our medicine chests. Calling pills ""the quintessential icon of Western Civilization,"" he bemoans the fact that America's attitude toward pills is ambivalent at best, and blames this state of affairs on both an elitist medical profession and public information campaigns that create undue hysteria about the consequences of recreational drug use. Dividing the book into such chapters as ""Another Clean-Cut, All-American Speed Freak,"" ""Amphetamines and Football,"" ""I Raided Tom Clancy's Drug Stash"" and ""Great Pharmacist Authors,"" he mixes cheerfully blistering rants against doctors, pharmacists and the FDA with overviews of the history, uses and side effects of various widely taken medications. Readers are told what security measures to take when breaking into a pharmacy, what combination of meds is most likely to prevent jet lag and how to forge a prescription. Brash, lively and lavishly illustrated, this is a fun and often informative read, although some of Hogshire's pollyannaish conclusions about the benefits of pills should be taken with a grain of salt, if not a dose of Valium. (Oct.)