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Last Updated: 6/2/2009

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Gender: Male
Status: In a Relationship
Age: 23
Sign: Leo

Country: UK
Signup Date: 3/3/2007

Blog Archive
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Wednesday, August 27, 2008 
Shroom has had another great review. Read it here.
Wednesday, June 18, 2008 
Thanks to everyone who has befriended me or posted comments recently - sorry I don't have time to thank you all personally. It means a lot that you like the book!

I'm busy with music at the moment, rehearsing and gigging with my Acid Folk band, Telling the Bees, and playing in a more trad folk duo with Beck Price. As far as writing goes, the 'difficult second book' rumbles one, still no contract signed. But I've just reviewed a book about Stonehenge for the Telegraph and got rung up by the Guardian for my comments about fairies. Can't ever say that life isn't interesting.

Summer solstice is soon upon us. It is, as the Space Goats said on their album Inamorata, 'the time of year to eat of the sacred fig, that fig that can take you to under and over worlds, that can give great insights, or insanities, and certainly...lots of colours'

Get thee enhurued,

Andy xxx
Sunday, November 04, 2007 
Andy will be appearing at The Synergy Project on November 23rd, speaking as part of a panel on 'The Future of Psychedelics'. Be great to see you there!
Saturday, May 12, 2007 
Andy will be speaking about the history of the magic mushroom at the Green Man festival (17th-19th August). Click the Green Man link in 'Shroom's Friends' to find out more about the festival.
Monday, April 09, 2007 
British writer, Gyrus, has this interesting review of Shroom up on his blog. Am emjoying all this engagement with my work!
Monday, April 02, 2007 
This from the Washington Times

This magic mushroom moment
Published April 1, 2007
Advertisement

SHROOM: A CULTURAL HISTORY OF THE MAGIC MUSHROOM
By Andy Letcher
HarperCollins, $25.95, 360 pages
REVIEWED BY JACOB SULLUM

Not long ago, at a party in Amsterdam, I was about to swallow some psilocybin mushrooms when the host interceded. Dividing the pieces into two piles, he twirled a small metal ball hanging from a thin chain above each, dangled the same "dowsing" device over my hand, and after some contemplation pointed me to the pile that was right for me. He also predicted, using amazingly precise but unverifiable numbers, exactly how the mushrooms would affect me along several different personality dimensions. This ceremony, akin to an unsolicited palm, aura or astrological chart reading, did not enhance my mushroom experience.
If you, like me, prefer your shrooms without the New Age baggage, Andy Letcher's book is for you. In "Shroom: A Cultural History of the Magic Mushroom," Mr. Letcher, a British writer and musician with a doctorate in ecology and another in religious/cultural studies, is careful to separate the truth about his subject from a "fantastical history . . . dreamed up on the basis of wishful thinking and overworked evidence."
Without dismissing the potential for mushroom-assisted mystical experiences (a phenomenon explored in a government-funded study by researchers at Johns Hopkins University that made headlines last year), Mr. Letcher rejects the idea that psychoactive fungi inevitably lead people in a specific spiritual or ideological direction. At the same time, he scolds politicians for overreacting to a practice that poses minimal risks and brings much-needed "enchantment" to quotidian life.
Mr. Letcher emphasizes that the significance of mushrooming, like that of other drug experiences, is "culturally contingent." In the 1960s, Americans and Europeans began to seek an experience they had until then equated with poisoning, reinterpreting effects that were once treated as signs of insanity or imminent death as an opportunity to explore inner worlds and see the outer one in a new light. Mr. Letcher's witty, entertaining and surprising book tells the story of how this happened, chronicling the contributions of explorers, naturalists, mycologists, philosophers, authors, charlatans, rock musicians and psychedelic visionaries.
Some of the facts Mr. Letcher confirms are at least as strange as the legends he debunks. Siberians, for instance, really do have a history of consuming fly-agaric mushrooms not only directly but also "distilled via human kidneys." Mr. Letcher speculates that they discovered the psychoactive properties of the mushroom itself, and of the urine excreted by people who have eaten it, by observing the antics of reindeer. In the winter, the animals supplement their meager diet of lichen by lapping up human urine, presumably for its mineral content.
In addition to the Siberian example, which goes back centuries at least, and there is substantial archeological evidence that psilocybin mushroom use in Mexico and Central America, observed by Europeans at the time of the Spanish conquest, has been going on for thousands of years. Mr. Letcher notes that both the Siberians and the Aztecs used psychoactive mushrooms recreationally as well as for healing and prognostication.
But Mr. Letcher finds little or no evidence to support most of the too-good-to-check claims about the role of intoxicating mushrooms in human history. Do experiences with the fly-agaric mushroom lie behind the legend of Santa Claus and his flying reindeer? Did witches, Druids and whoever built Stonehenge partake? Was a fungus at the heart of early Christianity, Vedic soma rituals and the Eleusinian mysteries of ancient Greece? Did prehistoric use of psilocybin mushrooms give birth to religion? Probably not, Mr. Letcher concludes, although in many cases the answer is unknowable.
Given the fly-agaric mushroom's unpredictable psychoactivity and its unpleasant side effects (including nausea and twitching), it is remarkable that it figures so prominently in speculation of this sort, not to mention in children's stories such as "Alice's Adventures in Wonderland" and fantasy writing for adults. Mr. Letcher suggests the fly-agaric's fictional popularity can be traced largely to its distinctive appearance: red with white spots in a classic toadstool shape, perfect for fairy tale illustrations. The more user-friendly psilocybin mushrooms, which come from several species and take various shapes, do not have the same iconic form.
The main conclusion Mr. Letcher draws after sorting fact from fancy is that deliberate use of psychoactive mushrooms by Westerners is a phenomenon of the last half century. He argues that stories about ancient and momentous mushroom use can be understood mainly as attempts to validate a modern practice by giving it deep religious roots. In reality, he says, now is the magic mushroom moment, not some vaguely remembered time when a fungus-centered society lived in harmony with nature because it drew wisdom from a psychoactive sacrament.
It may be true that magic mushrooms have never been more popular, but they remain a distinctly minority taste. Even in Amsterdam, where psilocybin mushrooms are available over the counter in "smart shops," a 2001 survey found that less than 8 percent of the population had ever tried them, while only 0.3 percent had used them in the previous month. The risks this small minority runs, which include bad trips, accidents and exacerbation of pre-existing psychological problems, hardly seem to justify the costs of prohibition.
In fact, as Mr. Letcher notes, prohibition tends to increase the hazards to users by forcing them to rely on the black market, encouraging potentially deadly amateur mushroom hunting and creating negative associations that make bad trips more likely. Around the time Mr. Letcher wrapped up his book, the British government closed a drug law loophole that had allowed possession and sale of fresh psilocybin mushrooms, a move he describes as "motivated more by political concerns than by any sensible assessment of the evidence."
A Labor Party M.P. objected to the hastily imposed ban. "We cannot make nature illegal," he said. "Magic mushrooms are part of the natural world. Some might describe them as a gift from God." If that sentiment sounds naive, how should we describe the attempt to purge the world of chemicals that produce politically incorrect states of consciousness, including chemicals contained in mushrooms that spontaneously pop up on cow patties and rotting wood all over the world? The mushrooms may not have magical powers, but neither do the prohibitionists.

Jacob Sullum, a senior editor at Reason magazine, is the author of "Saying Yes: In Defense of Drug Use" (Tarcher/Penguin).


Copyright © 2007 News World Communications, Inc. All rights reserved.
Tuesday, March 27, 2007 
You can read a thoughtful interview with Andy at Dose Nation.
Monday, March 19, 2007 
Dose Nation - a US-based psychedelic site - has given Shroom a glowing thumbs-up. Check this out:

Shroom Review
Friday, March 16, 2007 
Good news! Andy's paper, 'Mad Thoughts on Mushrooms: Discourse and Power in the Study of Psychedelic Consciousness', has been accepted for publication by the journal Anthropology of Consciousness. Should be coming out in fall 07.

The paper uses Foucauldian discourse analysis to pick apart the differing ways in which we represent the psychedelic experience and, when it was delivered at the 'Exploring Consciousness' Conference in Bath 2004, was described as 'groundbreaking'.
Friday, March 16, 2007 
Apologies if you're not seeing yourself appear on the World Map on this profile - for some reason it's not updating. If it don't get fixed soon I'll take it off.