cover image Hungover: The Morning After and One Man’s Quest for the Cure

Hungover: The Morning After and One Man’s Quest for the Cure

Shaughnessy Bishop-Stall. Penguin, $17 trade paper (416p) ISBN 978-0-14-312670-6

Journalist Bishop-Stall (Down to This: Squalor and Splendour in a Big-City Shantytown) explores the history and treatment of hangovers with humor and an amiable style, hindered by disorganization and gratuitous length. Believing the topic to be underexamined, he crisscrosses the globe to try “every tincture, tonic, powder, pill, placebo, root, leaf, bark, chemical and therapeutic process I could test, and then some others.” The reader follows him to an IV treatment at Hangover Heaven in Las Vegas, a session with Reset (a powder-liquid mix) at the Hangover Information Center in Amsterdam, and a Kräuter-Herbaud (herbal hay bath) in Almdorf Seinerzeit, Austria. Intriguing minihistories include the derivation of the phrase “hair of the dog,” the connection between drinking and sin, and theories regarding why glasses are clinked together during toasts. Bishop-Stall also inserts other material—experimenting with creating his own hangover cure, recreating a pub crawl from the comedy film The World’s End—into an already busy book. An ingratiating writer, he can be enamored with sentences that sound good, but don’t communicate much (“I became like a man scared of himself, yet undaunted by the morning”). Though perhaps well-matched to the subject, this book’s shambling and loose-limbed structure mostly detracts from its focus. (Nov.)