Webs of Smoke: Smugglers, Warlords, Spies, and the History of the International Drug Trade (State and Society in East Asia) (Paperback) ![]()
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![]() Editorial Reviews From Publishers Weekly "Read on and join the ranks of those who appreciate just how complicated a problem drug trafficking and use really is," the authors pronounce in their book's foreword. The authors, both historians, trace the development of the international drug trade between 1907 and 1954, shifting among Europe, Asia and the U.S. Throughout that time, the drug trade?and the money it represented?affected and was affected by political developments. Early in the century, even as European governments condemned drug use, they depended on the revenue from opium monopolies they ran in Asian colonies such as Hong Kong and Taiwan. The authors have done their homework well (providing footnotes and an extensive bibliography), but the final result is disjointed. Every few pages they throw in mini-biographies of players in the drug trade, from English bureaucrats to Chinese poppy growers and Japanese traders. It's easy to lose track of who's who, as people mentioned in an early chapter show up again 100 pages later, well after the reader has forgotten their significance. Concentrating on a few main characters who exemplified certain traits would have produced a more coherent whole. Only in the last few pages do Meyer and Parssinen find parallels between the Chinese opium trade and the current inner-city drug wars, something that would have given the work more current relevance. From Library Journal History professors Meyer (Lafayette Coll.) and Parssinen (Univ. of Tampa) have put together an authoritative and well-documented account of the history of world traffic in illicit narcotics in the first half of the 20th century. The authors probe the four elements common to a successful drug trafficking enterprise: supply, delivery, investment, and enforcement. Legislative initiatives and international regulatory efforts are set against a backdrop of high-stakes intrigue, underworld cabals, personal successes and failures, political opportunism, corruption, and shattered careers. By 1900, the shifting profile of the typical narcotics user?from Civil War veterans hooked on pain-killing opium to young urban hoodlums?resulted in growing public alarm about addicts and their drugs. Legislation soon emerged, as did America's first drug czar, Harry J. Anslinger. Except for the slight difference in focus, this work closely parallels Martin Booth's Opium: A History (LJ 6/15/98). Both books are essential for any collection seeking to provide historical insight into the current narcotics debate.?Philip Young Blue, New York State Supreme Court Criminal Branch Lib., New York ![]()
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