Ratings42
Average rating4.2
I thought this book might be a 5-star read, but it lost steam as it went on. Quinones does a great job at explaining the conditions that led to the opioid epidemic, including the ready availability of cheap Mexican heroin, the unchecked explosion of prescription opioids, and failing small town economies where the only business opportunities revolved around either one of the two. The description of the novel approach that the Mexican drug dealers took to marketing and selling their product was very interesting, for the first time....but by the time Quinones had portrayed it for the fourth or fifth time with little variation it had lost its impact. It is important to understand that the epidemic happened all over the US but we didn't necessarily need to read about its development in numerous different towns and cities because the story was basically the same in each one. And then at the end Quinones really lost me when he started moralizing about the reasons that Americans were so prone to getting hooked on either legal or illegal opioids - it had something to do with how permissive parents shielded their kids from hardship and then included the dangers of a world that uses trigger warnings. Huh? I also read Beth Macy's [b:Dopesick: Dealers, Doctors, and the Drug Company that Addicted America 37486540 Dopesick Dealers, Doctors, and the Drug Company that Addicted America Beth Macy https://images.gr-assets.com/books/1533010748s/37486540.jpg 59097428] and although that book had its flaws too, I think it did a better job of capturing the essence of the crisis in fewer pages while imparting the same information and avoiding the unnecessary preaching.