North Americans are the world's most compulsive and prolific users of legal opioids. Carlyn Zwarenstein, diagnosed with an inflammatory spine disease as a young mother, eventually turned to them to manage her pain. A Globe & Mail Best 100 Books of 2016, and shortlisted for the Canadian Science Writers' Association general audience book award for books published in 2016. In this lyrical update of Thomas De Quincey's Confessions of an English Opium-Eater, Zwarenstein recounts her search for relief and release-with its euphoric ups, hallucinatory lows and desperate pharmacy visits. Along the way she traces the long tradition of opium's influence on culture and imagination, from De Quincey to Frida Kahlo.
Amid headlines of overdoses and galloping addiction rates, Zwarenstein's darkly comic memoir is an outspoken and provocative dispatch from the New Age of Opium. Part love letter to Romanticism, part critique of modern medicine, Opium Eater offers a distinctly different riff on pain, creativity and mind-altering drugs.