A kaleidoscopic fever dream of ideas, idolatry, and lots of drugs: uniquely produced and curiously intoxicating.” - Kirkus Reviews Lin coherently challenges the sense behind labeling psychedelics as controlled substances…. His rendering of tripping is perfect-better even.than Aldous Huxley’s elegant and evocative passages in The Doors of Perception, because Lin’s account conveys reverence and immersion without grandiosity. “An immediately significant entry in the literature of derangement and recovery.” - Vulture, “The Best Books of the Year (So Far)” “ an incredible job describing what a psychedelic experience feels like.” - The Village Voice “ Trip is a sane book about becoming sane, and Lin’s most valuable work to date.” - The Irish Times “ Trip is, if not a guide to self-help, a book about a person trying to be happier, in part by changing the kinds of drugs he uses.another theory of psychedelics emerges, which suggests that the most mystical revelations concern earthly themes: birth, death, and the body family, friends, and love.” -Emily Witt, The New Yorker In exploring these ideas and detailing his experiences with psilocybin, DMT, salvia, and cannabis, Lin takes readers on a trip through nature, his own past, psychedelic culture, and the unknown. In Trip, Lin’s first book-length work of nonfiction, he charts his recovery from pharmaceutical drugs, his surprising and positive change in worldview, and his four-year engagement with some of the hardest questions: Why do we make art? Is the world made of language? What happens when we die? And is the imagination more real than the universe? McKenna, the leading advocate of psychedelic drugs since Timothy Leary, became for Lin both an obsession and a revitalizing force. While reeling from one of the most creative–but at times self-destructive–outpourings of his life, Tao Lin discovered the strange and exciting work of Terence McKenna. Part memoir, part history, part journalistic exposé, Trip is a look at psychedelic drugs, literature, and alienation from one of the twenty-first century’s most innovative novelists– The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test for a new generation.
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