Reviews

Dreamland. Opiatowa epidemia w USA by Sam Quinones

nooneyouknow's review against another edition

Go to review page

3.0

3.5 stars. Very scary reality laid out in depth. Phrases that were repeated verbatim several times throughout the book were pretty annoying, but the overall story really kept my attention.

pink_lady824's review against another edition

Go to review page

informative medium-paced

4.75

ehmannky's review against another edition

Go to review page

This is also a good book on the opioid epidemic but I've listened to multiple books on this now and the information just wasn't particularly new to me. 

emilyctrigg's review against another edition

Go to review page

informative

2.75

mbgianni's review against another edition

Go to review page

3.0

I debated between 3 & 4 stars - very informative book on an important topic, but it wasn’t edited well. It became repetitive and jumped around a lot. The end result was not a totally cohesive narrative, but the overall story was fascinating, and I enjoyed the descriptions of progress and notes of hope at the end.

allison_sirovy's review against another edition

Go to review page

5.0

I think my new favorite genre is narrative nonfiction. Dreamland takes the opiate epidemic and makes it real with human stories.

This book made me see the hypocrisy, though, of how Black and White addicts are/were treated differently. The author Sam Quinones talks about it explicitly - very briefly, but it was clear while reading the differences between the treatment of Black and White even though the book focused solely on White addicts. It’s amazing how our country rallied around White addicts and became much softer on crime, but Black addicts are still looked at as needing tough on crime laws.

Young adult adaptation: I’d recommend 7th grade and up.

mtnmama's review against another edition

Go to review page

3.0

Interesting and informative, but the various locations and individuals became hard to keep track of after a while. At times, it also seemed repetitive and jumped around, making it hard to follow.

yearlylists's review against another edition

Go to review page

3.0

This book was quite heavy. I already knew that opiates were a problem in the United States, but oh my.. I did not know that it was this bad. This really opened my eyes to the major flaws and mistakes that led up to this point, and it seems that little is done to actually change things on a deeper than surface level.

So, why 3 stars? Well it was well written, I feel like the writer had done a lot of research. However, a lot felt like repetition. He obviously had to make clear in how many places this was happening, and how separate these situations were being treated until people finally started to connect the dots. But often I found myself wondering if I was reading a part for the second time and my ereader somehow made a mistake or didn't save my progress.. This was not the case, just a lot of the same descriptions for very similar situations.

ktbentsen9's review against another edition

Go to review page

3.0

Lost stars from me due to problematic, stigmatizing language and redundancy of material explored. But the meat of this book is important info every American should know more about.

anandazhu's review against another edition

Go to review page

5.0

this book made me cry yet gave me many reasons to be hopeful and optimistic about the strength and resilience of this country (a tall order in such a bleak year) - a surprisingly restorative read on an important albeit devastating topic.