
Most Delicious Poison: From Spices to Vices - The Story of Nature's Toxins
by Noah Whiteman
Genres: Non-fiction, SciencePages: 304
Rating:

Synopsis:A deadly secret lurks within our kitchens, medicine cabinets and gardens...
Digitalis purpurea. The common foxglove. Vision blurs as blood pressure drops precipitously. The heartbeat slows until, finally, it stops.
Atropa belladonna. Deadly nightshade. Eyes darken as strange shapes flutter across your vision. The heart begins to race and soon the entire body is overcome with convulsions.
Papaver somniferum. The opium poppy. Pupils constrict to a pinprick as the senses dull. Gradually, breathing shudders to a halt.
Scratch the surface of a coffee bean, a chilli flake or an apple seed and find a bevy of strange chemicals - biological weapons in a war raging unseen. Here, beetles, birds, bats and butterflies must navigate a minefield of specialised chemicals and biotoxins, each designed to maim and kill.
And yet these chemicals, evolved to repel marauding insects and animals, have now become an integral part of our everyday lives. Some we use to greet our days (caffeine) and titillate our tongues (capsaicin), others to bend our minds (psilocybin) and take away our pains (opioids).
Inspired by his father's love of the natural world and his eventual spiral into the depths of addiction, evolutionary biologist Noah Whiteman explores how we came to use - and abuse - these chemicals. Delving into the mysterious origins of plant and fungal toxins, and their unique human history, Most Delicious Poison provides a kaleidoscopic tour of nature's most delectable and dangerous poisons.
Noah Whiteman’s Most Delicious Poison: From Spices to Vices – the Story of Nature’s Toxins is primarily focused on the issue of addiction, and includes discussion of his father’s alcoholism and death due to complications thereof. It muses on his own likely propensity toward addiction as well, and generally seems to be part an exorcism of Whiteman’s own demons around addictive plant products.
There is a great deal of discussion of chemistry and biology as well, discussing how exactly the toxins work, and how they interact with receptors — and even how that might have evolved (often coincidentally, but sometimes based on the fact that some things are widespread across the animal kingdom, having evolved early on). It was this that I was interested on, and it largely didn’t disappoint, though I felt the emphasis on addiction meant a bit of a narrowed focus beyond some other plant toxins that would’ve been interesting. Basically everything came down to addiction within a few pages, and I don’t think that emphasis was really clear in the book’s description.
I did also find Whiteman’s style a bit challenging, rather inclined to jump around/link together topics that aren’t closely linked in a very “and another thing!” manner.
Overall, not quite what I hoped for.
Rating: 2/5 (“it was okay”)