Customer Rating: 



Review Summary: It was ok...
Review: It was a good book but there didn't really seem to be a purpose. A little eclectic and scattered it was an interesting read but i would recommend The Electric Kool-AId Acid Test by Tom Wolfe instead.
Customer Rating: 



Review Summary: spiritual alientation in the modern world
Review: If Marx addressed the problem of modern man's alienation from an economic perspective, Pinchbeck addresses the exact problem from a spiritual stance, not unlike Jung. In the argot of postmodernism, this is a "readerly text. In other words, it's not something you'll use for your graduate thesis; but that's what I like about it: none of us is able to put forth our own personal ontology as something universal or objective. To do so would not only be a bore, but insufferably self-absorbed. Pinchbeck offers his experiences with wit and learned insight. Can't ask for more than that given the nature of the subject.
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Review Summary: fascinating reporting
Review: I read Pinchbeck's 2012 last Fall, and found his writing on contemporary shamanism fascinating. Where 2012 discussed a lot of other seemingly random, somewhat interconnected phenomena, the underlying narrative was his discussion of psychedelic drugs. Having never tried psychedelics, I found his study interesting, and 20122 was hard to put down...so I had to pick up Breaking Open the Head.
Breaking Open the Head is just as good as 2012. The focus was more on the drugs, less on Pinchbeck's life. Pinchbeck presents a convincing case for the decriminalization of psychedelics. He provides vivid depictions of his trips...both physical and psychedelic, making this a fast, entertaining read.
Customer Rating: 



Review Summary: Breaking Open the Head
Review: Pinchbeck has a talented, colorful writing style. I think this book will be helpful to people that are just beginning their quest for knowledge about entheogens. He gives a nice overview of the cultural history involved and quotes from writings by many well-know researchers. My favorite two parts in the book were his descriptions of Burning Man and the Ethnobotany Conferences. I laughed as I read through them, remembering some of my experiences at those events.
I am not trying to be too critical of the book, although I have to be honest. There were some inaccuracies and they distracted my concentration as a reader. Whenever I see inaccurate info, I always wonder what else was inaccurate that I didn't notice. It sort of ruins an author's credibility. It is like he needed to do a little more research in a few places.
The Pickard Case p. 212 - His LSD lab produced way more than 1/3 of the world supply. And the missile base it was operational in did not have the marble tiled bathroom or the expensive stereo system (those were at Todd's missile base - the lab was at another base).
Eating mushrooms in chocolate broth w/maoi p. 214 - Mushrooms and MAOI combo is fine, but chocolate being in the mix can be dangerous. I personally got myself into a hypertensive situation one time by eating chocolate accidentally while on an MAOI. Just a warning...
There were more inaccuracies but I will not note them all here.
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Review Summary: a must read
Review: hard to explain how positively this book affected me, but suffice it to say it points the way into a journey of awakening.