"An original and thrilling investigation into psychedelics and the claims and narratives that currently surround them. Ten Trips is perfectly pitched for those who are looking for a deeper exploration of the psychedelic experience and its possible meanings." — Mike Jay, author of Psychonauts: Drugs and the Making of the Modern Mind
“A dazzling, timely book, as deep and poignant as it is madcap and hilarious—exactly what you’d want from a book on psychedelics. Mitchell does something rare: he takes a promising, voguish region of interest in medical neuroscience and deepens it so that the whole culture is implicated.” — Professor Mark Lythgoe, director of the Centre for Advanced Biomedical Imaging, University College London
“A hair-raising hurtle of a ride into the belly of the 'psychedelic renaissance,' exposing and dissecting its perils and pitfalls, as well as the marvels and mysteries the 'medicines' can open up, all fueled by spectacular prose, and by the urgency of a desperate quest for healing of self, world and culture. Neuroscience, extractive post-colonialism, religion, therapy, addiction treatment, meditation, the contemporary wellbeing industry—all are given a thorough shaking-out, with as much brilliantly rendered trip porn as you could ever hope for.” — Henry Shukman, Spiritual Director, Mountain Cloud Zen Center
“An incisive, deeply personal, and beautifully written account of the power, the uses, and the modern misuses of psychedelics. Highly recommended.” — Professor Anil Seth, bestselling author of Being You: A New Science of Consciousness
“A captivating exploration of the mind’s untapped potential. In this deep dive into the realms of altered consciousness, Andrew Mitchell investigates the complexities of the psychedelic renaissance. A clever, groundbreaking and often hilarious insight into the world of modern mysticism and the inner workings of the mind. A must-read for anyone interested in this important and fascinating subject.” — Levison Wood, explorer and author of Walking the Himalayas
"Mitchell is a gifted writer, sprightly and light, yet profound; the nature of his inquiry—namely, the professional and corporate appropriation of hallucinogenics—is generously handled, with a healthy amount of skepticism. He has a big heart and a wide eye, and a great ear for dialogue. Mitchell is not afraid to put himself—warts and all—in the telling, to make it personal, and it is this that makes Ten Trips hum, true, and real." — Michael Taussig, anthropologist and author of Mastery of Non-Mastery in the Age of Meltdown
"Utterly compelling. Some books are in a category of their own and this is one them. Reading it is like having an out of body experience." — Mark Miodownik, author of Stuff Matters
"Beguiling, captivating, mind-expanding. It's impossible to read this book and not be tempted to replicate some of its wild, sanity-stretching forays into the peculiarities of human perception." — Stuart Ritchie, author of Science Fictions
"In Ten Trips, Andy Mitchell captures psychedelics’ gonzo spirit and speaks to the psychonaut in all of us." — Katherine MacLean, author Midnight Water: A Psychedelic Memoir
"Eagle-eyed, poetic and always playful, Ten Trips is chock-full of profane illumination." — Tehseen Noorani, Faculty of Medical and Health Sciences, University of Auckland
"Mitchell’s decapod of delirious drug experiences is an antidote to the hype and a rallying cry to keep psychedelics . . . psychedelic." — Josh Hardman, Psychedelic Alpha
"The psychedelic world has been waiting for this book: a sceptic’s account of the allure of psychedelics." — Erika Dyck, Professor in History of Health & Social Justice, University of Saskatchewan
2023-07-18
A British clinical neuropsychologist attempts to answer some “big questions” about psychedelic drugs by taking them himself.
The author addresses his skepticism of psychedelics, particularly the drugs’ efficacy as a treatment for trauma and the “relative lack of academic interest in the experiences themselves.” Of his first ayahuasca trip, he writes, “this is what real healing feels like.” In a chronological narrative, Mitchell records his experiences with psychedelic drugs in 10 locations in just over a month; before the final one, he writes, “it was becoming increasingly difficult to separate all the trips from all the trips.” In addition to various works of scientists, researchers, philosophers, and poets, the author offers details about each incident—e.g., “There’s no denying it: these mushrooms really fucking work!” and “I’d go so far as to say that I experienced transcendence.” Most experiences proved positive, although one trip was “the single most terrifying episode of my life,” during which he felt “different expressions of insanity.” Ketamine, he writes, was “more shallow than it was deep, a private weirdness to insulate one from the weirdness of the world.” After being told by a shaman in Colombia, “I drink my own medicine. Without it, I know nothing,” Mitchell writes, “There it was in a nutshell: the fusion of first and third person which harked back to the nearly obscured tradition of self-experimentation in Western science.” Calling psychedelics “MRIs of the soul,” Mitchell writes that these drugs can make you euphoric, intelligent, fearless, and enlightened, but also “uncertain, terrified, crazy, Republican, anarchic, delinquent.” Ultimately, he concludes, “the most fundamental lesson of my various trips is that these drugs defy our attempts to design them.”
Short on definitive conclusions, but worthwhile for those interested in the current and future role of psychedelics.