The Least of Us: True Tales of America and Hope in the Time of Fentanyl and Meth
Sam Quinones
(Author)
21,000+ Reviews
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Description
Apple Best Books of 2021
Longlisted for the Andrew Carnegie Medal * Shortlisted for the Zocalo Book Prize
Product Details
Price
$18.00
$16.74
Publisher
Bloomsbury Publishing
Publish Date
November 01, 2022
Pages
432
Dimensions
5.53 X 8.18 X 1.17 inches | 0.93 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9781639730476
BISAC Categories:
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Become an affiliateAbout the Author
Sam Quinones is a journalist, storyteller, former LA Times reporter, and author of four acclaimed books of narrative nonfiction, including New York Times bestseller and National Book Critics Circle Award winner Dreamland: The True Tale of America's Opiate Epidemic. "The most original writer on Mexico and the border" (San Francisco Chronicle), he lives with his family in Southern California.
Reviews
"This layered chronicle traces how methamphetamine and fentanyl became scourges of American life. . . . Quinones places the narrative in a range of illuminating contexts." - The New Yorker
"Sam Quinones is perhaps our best big-picture analyst of America's markets for addictive drugs ... He is a fluent storyteller who delivers his argument through a palette of affecting stories ... Few readers will keep dry eyes through the entire book" - The Washington Post "American pain. This is the territory of Sam Quinones, a masterly reporter and vivid, lyrical writer." - New York Times Book Review "Jam-packed with amazing facts and, like all of Quinones' work, reads like a thriller. You may think you know this story. Trust me, you don't." - Ann Coulter, Townhall "Together with his earlier Dreamland, The Least of Us confirms his place as a leading chronicler of an American nightmare." - New York Journal of Books "Chronicles how meth-ravaged communities have broken the cycle of drug abuse, violence and despair." - Los Angeles Times, 11 Books to Add to Your Reading List "This well-researched follow-up traces the next stage of the epidemic, with synthetic drugs and the next generation of kingpins. There is plenty of heartache, yes, but there is also hope in its exploration of communities trying to repair themselves." - New York Post "Excellent ... an urgent and gripping account." - Plough Quarterly, Editors' Pick "A richly rewarding report from the front lines of an ongoing emergency." - Publishers Weekly (starred review) "Readers looking for the latest take on the drug trade and recovery as well as those who flock to well written journalism will dig into this." - Booklist "Explores the fentanyl and meth crisis sweeping the U.S. while at the same time spotlighting the moments of hope and community that keep us going. From the wreckage of ruined lives come stories of faith, trust and belief in our fellow humans." - Newsweek "Outstanding ... elegantly written." - Taki's Magazine "A heartrending depiction of the current phase of the quixotic drug war. Sam Quinones covers the human drama with an admirable empathy." - Seattle Book Review "A painful sequel [to Dreamland] because it's an admission that we haven't beaten the national opioid addiction. Far from it. Quinones makes the convincing case that the problem has simply moved underground, changing locations from the doctor's office to back alleys, or to the internet." - Jacobin "[Dreamland] dug deeply into the circumstances and lives of the people who created, profited, battled, and suffered from the drug epidemic that has devastated huge swaths of the heartland beginning in the 1990s. . . . The Least of Us picks up where Dreamland left off and describes how the drug crisis -- fueled as much by the Sacklers as by Mexican traffickers -- has evolved." - Washington Independent Review of Books "A welcome corrective to the tendency to ignore the local roots of this crisis." - Front Porch "In The Least of Us, Quinones has continued his meticulous reporting to capture a full picture of how America's communities are working to resist the damage caused by illegal synthetic drugs - and also to fight the epidemic of isolation by repairing the threads of connection that have so badly frayed." - Sen. Lamar Alexander "With deep compassion and piercing insight, Sam Quinones beautifully captures the pain of America's opioid addiction and the gaping holes in society that allowed the tragedy to fester. He then not only offers condemnation of how we got here but true hope of how we can get out." - Ioan Grillo, author of BLOOD GUN MONEY "By combining rigorous research, keen insight and listening to people's stories across the country, Sam [Quinones has once again captured not only the pain and sadness but the resiliency and optimism that have come to be the hallmark of this epidemic." - Michael Botticelli, Former Director, White House Office of National Drug Control Policy "Sam Quinones is the indispensable ground-level guide to the epidemics of addiction that plague so many American ... Everyone should read this." - Angus Deaton, Nobel Laureate in Economics and co-author of DEATHS OF DESPAIR