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Smoke Snort Swallow Shoot

Legendary Binges, Lost Weekends, and Other Feats of Rock 'n' Roll Incoherence

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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

"This frenzied and harrowing roller coaster ride brings together some of the wildest and craziest drug stories ever told between the covers of one book. . . . About as addicting as some of the drug addled personalities that inhabit these grimy pages. . . . Bottom line, pick this one up and if you're like me you'll be anxiously awaiting the sequel." —Classic Rock Revisited

"A wildly entertaining read . . . Morbid? You bet, but the book is a guilty pleasure that's hard to put down." —New Noise Magazine

“. . . it calmed us down too much, so we took some acid, and then we took some mescaline to make it more colorful." —Lemmy

These are the highest of the highs, the rainbow rides before the crash, from some of the music industry's most fabled drug takers. Smoke Snort Swallow Shoot includes incredible excerpts from memoirs by Mötley Crüe, Aerosmith, Marilyn Manson, Johnny Cash, Lemmy (Motörhead), Slash (Guns N' Roses), Gregg Allman (The Allman Brothers), Anthony Kiedis (Red Hot Chili Peppers), Marianne Faithfull, Rex Brown (Pantera) and NOFX, among others.

“Gregory's idea of breakfast was to mix up a Brompton Cocktail—half morphine and half cocaine—and pass out on the floor of the Hotel Louisiana." —Marianne Faithfull

Take a ride with Marilyn Manson as he negotiates a bad acid trip and an unexpected mind-bending psycho-sexual encounter. Head upstate with Aerosmith as they shoot guns and heroin, crash cars and consume infinite quantities of cocaine, pausing now and again to record Draw the Line. Travel to Amsterdam with Guns N' Roses as they navigate through the red light district in search of a legendary fix. Disappear into a desert cave with Johnny Cash on a mission of death. Take a hilarious crash course in junkie studies with Smelly from NOFX, from introduction to withdrawal.

“Goddamn it, they're coming after us. Everybody eat what you got, or throw it out, but do something." —Duane Allman

Smoke Snort Swallow Shoot is a rollicking, often uproarious collection of some of the best writing on drugs ever to appear on the page. Sit back, relax and read. They did it so you don't have to.

Jacob Hoye is the author of the New York Times bestseller Tupac: Resurrection. Formerly the publisher of MTV Books, where he published bestselling memoirs by Nikki Sixx (The Heroin Diaries) and 50 Cent (From Pieces to Weight), among many others, he is currently the publisher of Lesser Gods. He lives in Brooklyn, New York.

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    • Kirkus

      January 1, 2017
      Rehashed tales of rock 'n' roll excess prove that even the most powerfully creative voices in music can be tone deaf about drug addiction.And so it goes. Johnny Cash loses it in Nickajack Cave, Ozzy Osbourne snorts up a bunch of ants, and Lemmy slips into premature rigor mortis. The lives of drug-addled recording artists over the last 50 years or so have been nothing if not predictably awful--and, unfortunately, cliche. Editor Hoye takes a steadfastly permissive approach, presenting the collection of coked-out confessionals without benefit of outside commentary or context; the pieces are merely excerpts from previous books. The likes of Aerosmith, Marilyn Manson, Slash, Dee Dee Ramone, Gregg Allman, and Anthony Kiedis drone on about how the pills and the smack drove them to the depths of depravity and degradation and back again. In one instance, Nikki Sixx and Osbourne seemed locked in a battle to become the most repulsive human being on tour. Osbourne won. In another all-too-familiar case, Red Hot Chili Peppers frontman Kiedis details how heroin actually cost him his multimillion-dollar gig. Heroine also looms large in the tawdry and twisted lives of multiple members of Guns N' Roses. Aerosmith's insufferable exploits at an out-of-the-way recording studio dubbed the Cenacle in the late 1970s are equal parts toxic and tedious. Only the late Cash seems to possess any self-awareness about the well-trodden road he's traveled. "The journey into addiction has been described so often by so many people in recent years that I don't believe a blow-by-blow account of my particular path would serve any useful purpose," he writes, ."..so while I do have to tell you about it, I'll try to avoid being tedious. Hit just the lowlights, so to speak." Alas, these rock stars and their copycat crackups are more gross than glorious. An overwhelmingly sad and consistently vulgar anthology.

      COPYRIGHT(2017) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Library Journal

      February 15, 2017

      Author (Tupac: Resurrection) and editor Hoye assembles excerpts from 17 rock memoirs, focusing on the most sensationalist sections, which deal with drugs of all sorts: heroin, marijuana, cocaine, and a plethora of pills. He includes the drug-fueled exploits of Greg Allman; Al Jourgensen of Ministry cavorting with acid king Timothy Leary; the legendary drug-induced albums of Aerosmith and the Rolling Stones; and Marianne Faithfull's early flirtations with drugs and young Stones Brian Jones and Keith Richards. The editor reprints the amphetamine troubles of country-rock icon Johnny Cash; the druggy haze of Lemmy Kilmister as a roadie for Jimi Hendrix and a member of Hawkwind and Motorhead as well as many other drug-related stories. In a few cases, he fails to provide the context for his material by neglecting to identify people who have been mentioned in earlier sections of the memoirs. VERDICT Although entertaining, Hoye's collection regurgitates lurid and shocking tales to little purpose other than to reiterate the adage: sex, drugs and rock and roll. Readers would be better served to seek out several of the excerpted books.--David P. Szatmary, Beaverton, OR

      Copyright 2017 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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