Death in Mud Lick: A Coal Country Fight Against the Drug Companies That Delivered the Opioid Epidemic

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Product Details
Price
$28.00  $26.04
Publisher
Scribner Book Company
Publish Date
Pages
304
Dimensions
6.3 X 1.1 X 9.3 inches | 1.0 pounds
Language
English
Type
Hardcover
EAN/UPC
9781982105310

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About the Author
Eric Eyre has been a newspaper reporter in West Virginia since 1998. In 2017, his investigation into massive shipments of opioids to the state's southern coalfields was awarded a Pulitzer Prize. He lives in Charleston, West Virginia, with his wife and son.
Reviews
"How did they get away with it for so long -- the corrupt drug manufacturers, distributors, pharmacies and physicians who flooded the most vulnerable communities in America with highly addictive pain pills, raking in billions of dollars even as thousands died from overdoses? Read Death in Mud Lick and understand. It is a stunning story, and Eric Eyre tells it with compassion, grit, deep knowledge and the 'sustained outrage' (as he puts it) that is the rocket fuel of great journalism."
--Dan Fagin, author of the Pulitzer Prize-winning Toms River

"Death in Mud Lick is simultaneously a gripping account of the corporate interests who started the opioid epidemic and a vivid illustration of the power of scrappy, relentless, investigative journalism. Eric Eyre is not just a great West Virginian; he's a national treasure."
--Keith Humphreys, former White House drug policy adviser to Presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama

"Eric Eyre represents the absolute best of newspaper reporting: He's dogged, fair, and as scrappy as the mountains he calls home. His book, Death in Mud Lick, is a riveting, intimate look at the corporate greed, regulatory failure and lobbying shenanigans that led to pill mills complete with "courtesy snacks" and cash registers so full they wouldn't close. In the most opioid-ravaged place in America, Eyre makes you see the opioid crisis anew."
--Beth Macy, author of Dopesick: Dealers, Doctors, and the Drug Company That Addicted America

"I thought I knew about the roots of the opioid crisis in rural Appalachia. Then, I read this book with my mouth agape. The larger-than-life characters, the vivid scenes, so many deaths, and so much money made from an alliance of local crooks and global corporations. With searing storytelling and deep investigative reporting, Eric Eyre has written an indispensable book that you won't be able to put down."
--Anna Sale, host of the podcast Death, Sex & Money

"In his newspaper work, Eric Eyre performed a historic public service, with his pioneering coverage of America's opioid disaster. In this book, he converts that achievement into a riveting drama of crime, collusion, coverup -- and then unveiling, by a reporter and a news organization that refused to give up. Death in Mud Lick attaches names, stories, and vivid characters to the major public-health story of our times."
--James Fallows, author of Our Towns: A 100,000-Mile Journey into the Heart of America

Eric Eyre blows the lid off the corporate malfeasance and institutional greed that created the greatest public health crisis in a generation. Death in Mud Lick raises the curtain on the players, tactics, and corruption that continues to rip our communities apart. A uniquely American tale and heartbreaking account that will leave every reader certain on how we got into this nightmare otherwise known as the opioid crisis."
--Ryan Hampton, nationally recognized recovery activist and author of American Fix: Inside the Opioid Addiction Crisis -- and How to End It

"At a time when real journalism is under attack, Death in Mud Lick stands as a clenched fist of rebuke. Eyre and the scrappy Charleston Gazette-Mail exposed the hellacious mendacity and moral criminality of America's biggest businesses and richest executives, and the hack politicians and lobbyists who enabled them to exploit some the most vulnerable people in this country and then leave them to die. Eyre's book is a thrilling recounting of how it all went down in the tradition of Call Northside 777 and Spotlight."
--Brian Alexander, author of Glass House: The 1% Economy and the Shattering of the All-American Town
One of Houston Chronicle's Most Anticipated

"Powerful . . . . [Eyre] writes with candor and gravity; a tensile rod of human decency braces every paragraph. . . . . [Death in Mud Lick] is the work of an author who understands that objectivity is not the same as bland neutrality. I expect it will be taught to aspiring reporters for many years to come. It's the story of an epidemic; it's also the story of a newspaper."
--New York Times

"Death in Mud Lick is a product of one reporter's sustained outrage: a searing spotlight on the scope and human cost of corruption and negligence."
--Washington Post

"At the Gazette-Mail, Eyre's career has been the stuff of quiet legend ... Eyre served his community in a time of need. With his new book, he took the death of a coal miner, William (Bull) Preece, found dead in a trailer in Mud Lick amid a residue of crushed pills, and told the how and the why. His reporting led to restrictions on prescriptions, greater tracking, more transparency. He shamed an industry and saved lives. Working at a small newspaper, Eyre made a big difference."
--NewYorker.com

"Eyre mined for the truth not with a hard hat or heavy machinery, but with notepads, pens and a doggedness to keep digging. Death in Mud Lick is for readers who root for the underdog, who want justice served and who love newspapers."
--Roanoke Times

"Compellingly told ... a tale of compassionate people deeply wronged and a dogged journalist who won't stand for it."
--Booklist, starred review

"Packed with colorful details and startling statistics, this page-turning journalistic thriller shines a brilliant spotlight on a national tragedy."
--Publishers Weekly, starred review

"Timely and well documented, with appeal to a broad range of readers."
--Library Journal, starred review

"Disturbing, moving, and heart-wrenching..."
--Kirkus Reviews

"Compelling and terrifying... In many ways [Death in Mud Lick is] as interesting as a John Grisham courtroom thriller, featuring an extended series of legal actions, the requisite heroes and villains, and personal problems that add to the drama."
--The Daily Beast