THIS IS A COLLECTION, SCRAPBOOK, TRIBUTE (with possibly one or two condemnations)—call The Marijuana Chronicles what you will, it's the book everyone will be talking about in between tokes. The literary gift for those hip college grads and doctoral students, your best friend and your best friend's mother who went to Woodstock, the book you bring to those Wall Street dinner parties and East Village readings, a book that is long overdue. Like Dave Chappelle says: "Hey, hey, hey. Smoke weed every day."
It also talks about the cannabinoids in marijuana. These are the chemical compounds in the plant which can be isolated and used to treat pain and even cancer.
One hit could change your whole life.
Marijuana: A Short History tells this story, and that of states stepping up to enact change.
Allen Ginsberg protesting in front of the New York Women's House of Detention, Ianuary 10, 1965 (Courtesy of Benedict I. Fernandez) “scrounge lounge,” as Sanders described his storefront, which still had “Strictly Kosher” on its window.
Peter Hecht, an award-winning journalist from The Sacramento Bee, offers an independent, meticulously reported account of the clashes and contradictions of a burgeoning California cannabis culture that stoked pot liberalization across the ...
The riveting adventures of a former pothead who blazed up, inhaled, held and blew out the potent smoke throughout the Western Hemisphere.
In Stoned, palliative care physician Dr. David Casarett sets out to do anything—including experimenting on himself—to find evidence of marijuana’s medical potential.
It's the story of a small town that became dependent on a forbidden plant, and of how everything is changing as marijuana goes mainstream.
A. Pearson, B. Jeffs, A. Witkin, and H. MacQuarrie, Infernal Traffic: Excavation of a Liberated African Graveyard in Rupert's Valley, St. Helena (Bootham, UK: Council for British Archaeology, 2011). 62. S. T. Oner, Cannabis Sativa: The ...
Forbes put revenue for legalized marijuana sales at $7.1 billion in 2016, and Bloomberg expects that number to grow to $50 billion by 2026 as state-based legalization expands and a growing number of users turn to a legal supply.