book suggestions

Image by Marketa, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Information about psychedelic history, science, and culture can be found in movies, podcasts, and on various websites on the Internet (Erowid and MAPS are two excellent places to start), but books remain among the best resources available for expanding one’s knowledge about psychedelics. Over the past ten years, I have read many psychedelic-related books and have amassed a list of favorites that I would like to share with the Psychedelic Times audience.

Some of these books may be familiar to you, while others may be brand new. The following list is by no means an authoritative collection of the best psychedelic books, since I have not yet read everything that has been published. However, my hope is that everyone who reads this article will find at least one or two books that they find valuable for their own pursuits. Without further ado, here are the books:

 

1. The Psychedelic Explorer’s Guide: Safe, Therapeutic, and Sacred Journeys
by James Fadiman, Ph.D.

Hands down, this is always the first book that I recommend to anyone who wants to know more about psychedelics. Even after absorbing a ton of information about psychedelics over the years, I feel like this book has many new things to teach me. It covers several topics of which I was previously unaware, such as the concept of sub-perceptual microdosing and the positive impact that listening to non-vocal music pieces during the beginning of a psychedelic experience can have on one’s overall journey. My intention when reading the book was to learn how to become a guide for others undergoing psychedelic experiences, and Fadiman’s advice for “trip sitters” is very concise, helpful, and wise. The book also has plenty of advice for those thinking of embarking on their own psychedelic voyages, like paying attention to components like set, setting, substance, sitter, session, and support. The Psychedelic Explorer’s Guide does a great job of dispelling some of the myths about psychedelics, offers a practical and positive itinerary for a successful experience, introduces several important people in this field, and does so in a way that is unbiased and helpful. In my opinion, this is a must-read for psychonauts and guides alike.

 

2. True Hallucinations
by Terence McKenna

No list of psychedelic books would be complete without at least one of the bard Terence McKenna’s books. Although Food of the Gods: The Search for the Original Tree of Knowledge is McKenna’s best-known work, True Hallucinations is my favorite. After the death of his mother in 1971, Terence, his brother Dennis, and three friends found themselves in the Colombian Amazon in search of oo-koo-hé, a psychoactive plant concoction containing DMT. At Dennis’ insistence, the group found themselves involved in a psychedelic experiment with the goal of contacting the Logos. The experiment at La Chorrera involved the use of psilocybin mushrooms and a vocal technique which Dennis developed to attempt actual DNA alteration during a psychedelic experience. The experiment resulted in a shamanic initiation for the two brothers, with Terence communicating with a divine voice and Dennis undergoing a dramatic psychological breakdown of sorts. While the book The Invisible Landscape: Mind, Hallucinogens, and the I Ching goes into more detail about the experiment that occurred five years prior at La Chorrera, I found True Hallucinations to have benefited from twenty years of reflection. It is a more clearly-written and objective assessment of what happened to the Amazonian travelers, and certainly worth checking out.


3. The Brotherhood of the Screaming Abyss: My Life with Terence Mckenna
by Dennis McKenna

While we’re on the topic of the McKenna brothers, it’s worth highlighting Dennis McKenna’s account of the McKenna Brothers’ stories, The Brotherhood of the Screaming Abyss: My Life with Terence McKenna. Although most people are familiar with Terence’s lectures, his gift of gab had a tendency to anesthetize his listeners, causing some to blindly place faith in his wild ideas. Dennis’ attention to detail and his ability to remain honest in his description of the brothers’ lives (he is often quite blunt!) makes for an extremely interesting read. According to Dennis, there are several things Terence presented to his audience that may have been only partial truths. The stories contained in the book and the list of suggested reading material at the end make for an excellent book that everyone interested in the history of psychedelics and Terence McKenna should read.


4. PiHKAL: A Chemical Love Story
by Alexander Shulgin and Ann Shulgin

Written by Alexander “Sasha” Shulgin and his wife Ann Shulgin, “PiHKAL” is an acronym for “Phenethylamines I Have Known And Loved.” The book is broken up into two distinct sections. The first is a compelling narrative that shares how the couple fell in love, their interactions with friends and family, and their exploration of various phenethylamine compounds. The latter part of the book is a chemist’s dream-come-true, complete with notes on indole rings and molecule construction. Many people refer to this part of the book as the “Recipes” section, as it can be used to synthesize a wide assortment of phenethylamine compounds (not that we recommend this.)  If you like this book, you may also want to check out its sequel, TiHKAL: The Continuation as well.


5. The Teachings of Don Juan: A Yaqui Way of Knowledge
by Carlos Castaneda

This was one of the first books that I read on the topic of psychedelics, and at the time it blew my mind wide open. Carlos Castaneda was an American anthropologist and author who wrote a series of books about his experiences with traditional Mesoamerican Shamanism. This is the first in the series, and it offers a first-person account of Castaneda’s apprenticeship with a Yaqui shaman named Don Juan Matus. The two met in 1960 while Castaneda was seeking knowledge about peyote, and over the course of the book he experiences Mescalito (peyote), Datura inoxia (Jimson weed), and Humito (a smoke-mixture comprised of various herbs and Psilocybe mexicana). He claimed that these plants took him to a realm that he described as “non-ordinary reality”, which he defined as being every bit as real as our ordinary reality. Many people consider Castaneda to be a fraud and advise against reading his works, but I find them to be valuable as long as they are approached with a healthy dose of skepticism.

 

6. DMT: The Spirit Molecule
by Rick Strassman, MD

Dimethyltryptamine (DMT) is a powerful psychedelic compound naturally produced by the human brain and also found in many plants and animals. After a 40-year lull during which there was no government-approved psychedelic research being conducted, Rick Strassman conducted a series of biomedical assays on DMT during the early 1990’s at the University of New Mexico. One of the things that may surprise you about this book is its impressive writing quality. Even though Strassman has a scientific background, he also has a remarkable ability to turn a phrase and keep his readers’ interest. Among other topics such as the history of psychedelics and Strassman’s career, the book primarily focuses on the experiences of the volunteers during their participation in the DMT studies. As a practicing Buddhist, Strassman does incorporate a bit of spirituality into the book. However, it doesn’t take the front seat, so there’s no need to avoid this one if you’re not into that. Overall, this is an insightful look at the first studies that helped spark the recent psychedelic renaissance.


7.Plants of the Gods: Their Sacred, Healing, and Hallucinogenic Powers
by Richard Evans Schultes, Albert Hofmann and Christian Rätsch

Plants of the Gods: Their Sacred, Healing, and Hallucinogenic Powers is the definitive photographic encyclopedia of psychedelic plants, compiled by ethnobotanist Richard Evans Schultes, the Swiss scientist and creator of LSD Albert Hofmann, and world-renowned anthropologist and ethnopharmacologist Christian Rätsch. It features rare color photographs of psychedelic plants, explores their use in shamanic rituals, and details helpful information regarding various aspects of each plant. The authors analyze the biochemistry of the plants as well as the sacred contexts in which they are used. This book is visually impressive while providing an investigation into a variety of unique plants, many of which are uncommon or rare.

 

8.The Long Trip: A Prehistory of Psychedelia
by Paul Devereux

Focusing on the extensive history of human usage of psychedelic substances, this book asserts that—contrary to mainstream opinion—we have been embarking on psychedelic journeys for much longer than the 1960’s. Devereux offers evidence showing that psychedelics have been used for millennia in every habitable part of the world for ritualistic and spiritual purposes. In fact, our modern society is quite unique in its refusal to accept these substances and integrate them into our civilization. This is not only a unique exploration into less-explored psychedelic territory, but it is thoroughly researched and well-written. As such, it truly deserves our community’s attention.


9. Psychedelic Healing: The Promise of Entheogens for Psychotherapy and Spiritual Development
by Neal M. Goldsmith, Ph.D.

Neal Goldsmith is a psychotherapist and counselor with a private practice in New York who takes a psychospiritual approach to personal development, healing, and change. This book explores his entertaining personal history with psychedelics and focuses on the potential for true healing to occur as a result of a psychedelic practice. The introduction proposes questions such as, “Can psychedelic therapy trigger immediate transformative change in novel areas?”, “How should psychedelics be rescheduled?”, and “Can psychedelics provide lasting change?” Each question is examined later on in the book, as Goldsmith explores the plausibility of fundamental personality change while giving a detailed history of psychedelic research, providing lessons gained by psychedelic therapy, and discussing implications for the future. He suggests ways that we can work to change drug laws, offers personal experiences of difficult experiences at Burning Man, and provides guidelines for safe and effective psychedelic journeys. If you or someone you know has an area of life that needs healing, this could help tremendously.


10. Aya Awakenings: A Shamanic Odyssey
by Rak Razam

Rak Razam, a self-described experiential journalist, explores the mystery and ritual surrounding ayahuasca in this book. While in South America he trains with many different indigenous ayahuasqueros, each of which has a unique way of approaching the medicine. Some of the common threads are icaros (the songs of the vine), brujeria (evil and threatening forces that want to harm ayahuasqueros and their clients), and mapacho (a specific type of tobacco used during ceremonies to cleanse and purify the ritual space and spirits inside). As Razam undergoes one ceremony after another, The Vine of Souls seems to lead him deeper into the Amazon. Each experience is different, but somehow all are connected to the web of life. Overall, Aya Awakenings: A Shamanic Odyssey is an excellent account of 21st century shamanism in the Amazon.

 

11. Breaking Open the Head: A Psychedelic Journey into the Heart of Contemporary Shamanism
by Daniel Pinchbeck

In this book, Daniel Pinchbeck, American author and co-founder of the web magazine Reality Sandwich and the transformative online community Evolver.net, mixes his personal history with a fresh analysis of the spiritual sacraments used by tribal cultures around the world. One of the engaging personal tales he shares focuses on a thirty-hour iboga ceremony with the Bwiti in Gabon, where the participants have their heads “broken open” by insufflating a potentially fatal dose of iboga. Pinchbeck also explores the merging of modern Western consciousness with psychedelics, taking a look at influential thinkers like Allen Ginsberg, Antonin Artaud, and Terence McKenna. This is a fascinating look at psychedelia, and the author brings us along for the ride in his personal transformation from a jaded Manhattan journalist to shamanic initiate and grateful citizen of the cosmos.

 

12. Acid Test: LSD, Ecstasy and the Power to Heal
by Tom Shroder

Tom Shroder is an editor at The Washington Post Magazine, an acclaimed journalist, and the author of Old Souls: Compelling Evidence from Children Who Remember Past Lives. His book Acid Test: LSD, Ecstasy and the Power to Heal weaves several non-fiction narratives together into a captivating story that includes an in-depth history of psychedelic research, explores various characters in the psychedelic community, and describes the current state of psychedelic research (with a focus on MDMA-assisted psychotherapeutic treatment of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder). One of the most compelling stories in the book is that of former Marine Nicholas Blackston, who witnessed horrors in war that most of us cannot even fathom. When he returned stateside he was internally tortured by recurring nightmares, uncontrollable flashback hallucinations, a temper with an increasingly short fuse, and physical pain from shrapnel wounds. Blackston was fortunate to seek and receive help from MDMA-assisted psychotherapy and has experienced a significant diminishing of his PTSD symptoms. Shroder uses this man’s experience to argue that our veterans deserve the right to receive reliable and effective treatment, rather than the dangerous and fruitless hodgepodge of pharmaceutical drugs that they typically receive. MDMA is on track to be legalized for therapy by 2021, and books like this one go a long way toward supporting that effort.

 

13. Zig Zag Zen: Buddhism and Psychedelics
Edited by Allan Badiner and Alex Grey

This is a compilation of articles and interviews written and conducted by several respected luminaries in both the Buddhist and psychedelic communities. The pieces explore the overlap between Buddhism and psychedelics, together conducting a dialogue concerning whether psychedelics have a place in sincere Buddhist practice, and vice-versa. Exploring topics such as The Tibetan Book of the Dead, spiritually-influenced artwork, the potential of psychedelics in spiritual traditions, psychoactivism, and the use of cannabis in harm reduction, this book is an extremely well-written and edited exploration of psychedelics in the context of Buddhist practice.

 

14. The Genesis Generation: A Psychedelic Novel
by Lorenzo Hagerty

Originally published in audiobook form, The Genesis Generation: A Psychedelic Novel is a semi-fictional autobiography of Psychedelic Salon host Lorenzo Hagerty’s emergence into the psychedelic community. The protagonist of the story, William, is stuck between two worlds: the world of corporate America and the psychedelic community. As the events of the narrative unfold, the reader is shown his transformation from a 29-year-old “yuppie-geek” into a valuable member of the psychedelic community. The characters in the novel visit places such as Palenque, Mexico, Texas, Amsterdam, Vietnam, and Burning Man before reaching an unexpected climax. This is the only fictional book on this list, and for good reason—it chronicles the tale of one of the most influential psychedelic luminaries of our time.

Note: Regarding the process of acquiring this book, the Kindle edition is available by clicking the above link, and Lorenzo has been known to send paperback copies of the book (which are no longer in print) individually to fans. To get in touch with him and ask for a copy, you can go to psychedelicsalon.com and click the “Contact” link in the navigational bar at the top of the site.

 

15. Lysergic
by Krystle Cole

Rounding out the list is NeuroSoup founder Krystle Cole’s book Lysergic, which details her involvement with the LSD manufacturers for the Brotherhood of Eternal Love back in the late 1990’s and early 2000’s. Starting out as a small town girl from Kansas, Cole met Todd Skinner, one of the chemists involved with manufacturing LSD, at a strip club where she was temporarily employed. She had no experience with psychedelics when he insisted that she try MDMA, which turned out to be a life-changing journey for her and led her onto a psychedelic path. In the book, she sheds light on many of her personal experiences with a wide array of psychedelic compounds and explains the complicated and confusing legal cases that this group of people were wrapped up in during that time. It’s a one-of-a-kind perspective on the topic, and definitely worth checking out.

Whether you’re an experienced psychonaut or brand new to the subject of psychedelics, I hope this list offers something new for you to check out. If you have any book suggestions that you would like to share with me, I welcome you to find my contact information in my bio or contact me via my Goodreads profile.