I found this book useful from a clinical point of view, as well as clarifying from a psychedelic therapy point of view. I certainly recommend this book. Pedro Ruiz, MD, Baylor College of Medicine, Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease A deeply researched, significant and very specific intervention into the historiography of LSD, drug research, research design and drug use in the context of psychiatry. Oram's study benefits a close and extended reading, and he should be congratulated on writing such a fascinating history. James Pugh, University of Birmingham, Social History of Medicine People interested in drug development, ethics boards, approvals committees and the consequence of research-governance directives will enjoy this book. The Trials of Psychedelic Therapy shines a fascinating light on a discipline that is neither pure pharmacotherapy nor pure psychotherapy. Oram shows how LSD's unique position between these seemingly disparate fields has been, and still is, its potential undoing when it comes to obtaining formal licensed approval. Ben Sessa, Imperial College, British Journal of Psychiatry [ The Trials of Psychedelic Therapy] introduces many key figures in LSD research and provides convincing new analysis of studies that are fascinating in themselves. Now that psychedelic therapy is again drawing interest, it is worth fully exploring why research faltered the first time around. Sarah Brady Siff, Miami University, Medical History Oram's accessible writing style should appeal to a range of audiences, from historians and psychiatrists to graduate students and popular science readers. His major argument is consistent and coherent, and his analysis raises interesting questions . . . Prohibition might not have killed the field, but many 'first wave' and contemporary psychedelic researchers strongly believe that it impedes their work. Perhaps Oram's book will offer new stories to tell in the emerging 'psychedelic renaissance'. Danielle Giffort, St. Louis College of Pharmacy, History of Psychiatry Carefully researched and insightful . . . [ Oram] tackles how serious medical investigators handled LSD. W. J. Rorabaugh, University of Washington, Journal of American History This book is highly recommended reading not just for aficionados of hallucinogenic drugs but for anyone interested in the history of drug development and regulation. Nicolas Rasmussen, University of New South Wales, Bulletin of the History of Medicine