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| View Larger Image | Drugs of the Dreaming: Oneirogens: Salvia divinorum and Other Dream-Enhancing Plants by Gianluca Toro, Benjamin Thomas by Jonathan Ott
| | List Price: | $12.95 | | Price: | $11.01 | | You Save: | $1.94 (15%) |  | | Available: | Usually ships in 24 hours |  | |  | | Sales Rank: | 555277 | | Studio: | Park Street Press |  | | Binding: | Paperback | | Number Of Pages: | 160 | | Publication Date: | May 21, 2007 | | Publisher: | Park Street Press |
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EDITORIAL REVIEWS | Product Description The first comprehensive guide to oneirogens--naturally occurring substances that induce and enhance dreaming
• Includes extensive monographs on dream-enhancing substances derived from plant, animal, and human sources
• Presents the results of scientific experiments on the effects of using oneirogens
• Shows how studies in this area of ethnobotany can yield a scientific understanding of the mysterious mechanism of dreams
Oneirogens are plant and animal substances that have long been used to facilitate powerful and productive dreaming. From the beginning of civilization, dreams have guided the inner and outer life of human beings both in relation to each other and to the divine. For centuries shamans have employed oneirogens in finding meaning and healing in their dreams.
Drugs of the Dreaming details the properties and actions of these dream allies, establishing ethnobotanical profiles for 35 oneirogens, including those extracted from organic sources--such as Calea zacatechichi (dream herb or “leaf of the god”), Salvia divinorum, and a variety of plants from North and South America and the Pacific used in shamanic practices--as well as synthetically derived oneirogens. They explain the historical use of each oneirogen, its method of action, and what light it sheds on the scientific mechanism of dreaming. They conclude that oneirogens enhance the comprehensibility and facility of the dream/dreamer relationship and hold a powerful key for discerning the psychological needs and destinies of dreamers in the modern world. |
CUSTOMER REVIEWS (Average Customer Rating: 2.0 based on 4 reviews)
| This book put me to sleep without any dreams  Most uninteresting and uninformative book ever....I am sad that the wonderful author J. Ott decided to put his name on this book by writing the forward. The book tries to cover way too much information and in the end, ends up covering absolutely nothing. I learned nothing about drugs/plants that enhance dreams...nothing. December 17, 2007 | | Mostly hype. Very little substance. And a TERRIBLE title!  I had seen this book advertised in the back of another book by the same publisher, and was looking forward to it's publication. After purchasing it, I'm largely disappointed.
The author has included a lot of entries in a fairly short (149 pg) book. There's very little in-depth information, so if you're hoping for that, you may be disappointed. The book is primarily a broad overview, at best, with some plants receiving a few pages and others just a few sentences. The author also discusses animal, mycological and chemical oneirogens.
One thing I find curious is that the subtitle of the book is "Oneirogens: Salvia divinorum and Other Dream-Enhancing Plants". One would expect that Salvia divinorum would feature prominently in the work, but that's not the case. This plant was given little more than a single page out of the entire text, so why would it be featured in the subtitle?
Based on the "barely there" treatment Salvia divinorum received, I can't help but wonder if marketing wasn't the real motivation for including this plant in the subtitle. Is the author/publisher trying to take advantage of the increasing (and unfortunate) "buzz" about Salvia divinorum? Is it a way to capture attention and sell books? Who knows, but it's certainly not because the author had anything substantive to say about Salvia divinorum.
Those of you looking for any meaningful, or even moderately detailed information on this plant won't find it here. Salvia divinorum was, despite the subtitle, barely given a passing nod in this work. In many ways, the way this book is presented versus the reality of the book itself feels like a real bait-n-switch.
And, strangely enough, many of the plants in the book have little or nothing to do with dreaming at all. This seems odd for a book that's supposed to be about oneirogens.
A major complaint I have with the author and/or publisher is the awful title! DRUGS of the Dreaming? It's no surprise to anyone with an interest in the history of sacred plants, and their role in indigenous cultures, that this field of study faces a great deal of opposition in today's modern culture. At every turn one sacred plant after another is being banned, made illegal and inaccessible. Couple this with the countless newspaper articles and television reports, demonizing these plants as "drugs", and you are left with a deeply distorted view of the subject.
And rather than take the opportunity to correct this, to offer a more balanced and respectful perspective on the subject, the author and publisher seem to play into this nonsense. It's a shame, because not only does it disrespect the path of working with plants, a path whose history stretches back thousands of years and spans all cultures around the world, but it also feeds the distorted perspective of the mainstream culture, while supporting more media hysteria.
To me, this is simply irresponsible. It also points, once more, to the author and publisher having a greater interest in sensationalism and selling books than capturing the soul of the road. If the objective is to market books, this approach may work. If, however, the intention was to offer a respectful treatise on the dream-enhancing medicine of plants, it is, in my opinion, a total failure.
Indigenous people around the world don't view, treat or approach plants as "drugs". They are viewed as teachers and elders, keepers of roads that lead to healing of both body and soul. They are met with reverence and care, not treated as drugs or reduced to their phytochemistry alone. Regardless of one's relationship to the road, why not treat these ancient traditions with some degree of respect? Reducing the plants to "drugs" doesn't seem respectful or responsible.
I had expected more from this book. I can't help but feel both mislead by the presentation and disappointed by the product.
Without a doubt, there are far better books out there. Sadly little has been written about true oneirogens, and in my opinion this book doesn't seem to add much of any meaning to the existing body of literature. October 15, 2007 | | Highly Over-rated (no pun)  This book is a total waste of time. The botanical information is extremely limited in scope, and those wanting to read Ott will find that his contribution consists only of a very small forward. Instead, get the excellent, revised and expanded "Plants of the Gods" by the highly respected Richard Evans Schultes, the Harvard ethnobotanist who mentored Wade Davis. I had to keep referring to Schultes while reading this book, for the proper plant names. "Plants of the Gods" is well worth the price of a few more dollars; it contains vastly superior research on shamanism, and a wide range of botanical information. You might also enjoy the numerous books by Wade Davis or Paul Stamets, also readily available via Amazon (appropriate source-name). Good luck! October 01, 2007 | | Both historical usage and spiritual applications make for a fine survey.  New age collections strong in health and drug and dreaming properties will find DRUGS OF THE DREAMING: ONEIROGENS: SALVIA DIVINORUM AND OTHER DREAM-ENHANCING PLANTS to be an essential acquisition. It details the properties and actions of selected 'dream allies', including ethnobotanical profiles for over thirty of these plants. Both historical usage and spiritual applications make for a fine survey. August 06, 2007 | |
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