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WHEN PUSH COMES TO SHOVE by HOLLIE A. ROSE

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Books Written by Real Deadheads!

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LSD / MEMOIRS / COMPILATIONS / FUN / FICTION

That’s what this page is about – showcasing books written by actual real Deadheads. (Ya know… if there is such a thing.)

If you have any ideas for books I should add – send me an email – HollieRoseBooks@gmail.com – I love learning about new books and new-to-me Deadhead authors!

Welcome to a highly opinionated, haphazardly curated, and unlikely to be comprehensive list of books. These are the books that fly under the radar when you go looking for books about the Grateful Dead – because these books generally are NOT about the Grateful Dead. (All while kinda being absolutely about the Grateful Dead and the Deadhead scene.)

These books are memoirs, like – How does a teenager fall in love with a band? How does the music of the Dead sustain a cyclist? How does a drug dealer on Tour deal with the War on Drugs? How does a Deadhead make meaning out of time spent in prison? Some authors take us on their Dead Tour as they and their friends lived it. Some contemplate how immersing oneself in the Dead can deepen a yoga practice. Some ask big questions, like – What’s a Deadhead to do after… And what does “after” even mean?

One category I assembled is Compilation books – Deadheads who met Jerry – Deadheads who went to Englishtown – Tapers stories.
Stuff like that.

Some of it is various and weird non-fiction stuff like – lets look at the economics of the machine – let’s look at the fashion and how it has evolved – lets look at the sociopolitical meaning of this whole place / space / scene. This section gets rather scholarly – How did the way the Dead approached live recordings change the music industry? Let’s compare Deadheads and Christians – Let’s examine the whole of it with a lens of Philosophy. Truly fascinating stuff here.

You’ll also find my own little version of history books. Mostly I started with some LSD history, but that branched off into other Deadhead-adjacent realms – like let’s serve up some hippie history, some festival history, and maybe some Haight Street history too.

And then there’s the fiction!!!! So many more topics and themes than I can list.
There’s books about things happening on Tour, or things happening in people’s lives where the Dead inspires them or some such. Like the Sheriff who solves crimes by contemplating Grateful Dead lyrics, the grieving widower who takes his young children on Tour, the science geek college kids who find a wormhole in a particular version of Scarlet-Fire. There’s murder mysteries and coming of age novels that happen in the Dead parking lot. There’s a Vampire Deadhead and a couple romances too!

Some of these books are favorites of mine, some are culled from my to-read list, and I must admit, some are books I’ve just learned about while compiling this list.

Also please let me say this – if you want to write a book about your experience on Dead Tour please DO IT!
Your voice matters.
The world needs every angle of this history!

Some notes about the curation of this page:
This page isn’t for books about the Band, or the Band’s family.
There are already a couple places where you can find such lists.
I’m aiming to make this more about authors who didn’t get to smoke joints with the band on the regular. I want to showcase the unfamous Deadheads who have written books.
Granted, sometimes there’s some overlap.
I list Bill Walton’s memoir, and David Gans’ Memoir too because while those folks are indeed famous, the books in question absolutely fit my idea of a “Deadhead Memoir.”
Plus as I said above – this list of mine is somewhat haphazard and affected by the vagaries of my mood when I’m working on the website. So be it.
I’m just trying to help readers find a different sort of book when they wonder what they can read about The Grateful Dead.

Also, I tried not to list anything that’s out of print because my goal here is to get you to go support these authors and to read this stuff!
And yes, I’ve listed these with affiliate links so if you buy from my links, I get a small commission. (Support two authors with one book!)

 

JUMP TO:

LSD / MEMOIRS / COMPILATIONS / FUN / FICTION


Memoirs and books about being a Deadhead.


When Push Comes to Shove; Real Life on Dead Tour; The Journals of Hollie A. Rose

This is a book about selling LSD on Grateful Dead Tour.
Spanning the musically electrifying years of 1988 to 1992, this narrative brings to life an important yet rarely acknowledged piece of the larger history of Deadheads and the Grateful Dead subculture. Let’s be honest here, lots of people wanted “enhancements” when they came to a Dead Show. Obviously it was historically appropriate that someone had to make sure those party favors were available, even if it was the height of the War on Drugs.
This book is the author’s actual journals written while she lived on the road with the Dead.

[I really want this to be a comprehensive list of books by Deadheads so I’ve listed my own book here too. So it goes…]

Buy When Push Come to Shove

Growing Up Dead: The Hallucinated Confessions of a Teenage Deadhead by Peter Conners

[This is absolutely one of the most well written, shiniest, and brightest, Deadhead memoirs I’ve yet read. Highly recommended.]

A story of a straight-laced suburban kid who discovered Grateful Dead concerts at the age of 16 in 1987. Soon, he was traveling with a makeshift ‘family’ of other Deadheads in a Volkswagen camper, selling drugs and whatever else would provide gas money to the next concert. Chronicling his progression from suburban kid, to full-blown Deadhead Conners reveals deep truths about Deadhead culture, history, and reality. This is a riveting insight into the obsessive fandom that made The Grateful Dead the most successful touring band of all time.

Buy Growing Up Dead

Sunshine Daydream – one girl’s tale of life on the bus by Talia Rose

[Full disclosure – I’m in this book, this book is dedicated to me, this author is also in my book.]

One girl’s tale of years spent on Grateful Dead Tour and beyond. A beautiful and sometimes sordid tale of sex, drugs and rock ‘n’ roll. Her no BS view of the world after the rose-colored glasses came off regarding the late 1980’s Grateful Dead parking lot scene is eye opening. This is a story about idealism, growing up, and surviving.

Buy Sunshine Daydream

Haight St. Posse by Token Jackson

[I can find no reviews of this book online – but here are some notes I made when I read it.]

A memoir by a Deadhead who is very open in admitting that drugs are what drew him to the scene. It’s a Deadhead street memoir, a stoner’s story of swinging drugs on Haight St, getting addicted to heroin and getting off heroin. A rambling narrative, told as if the author were sitting in front of you telling his story. I liked it. After reading this book, I feel like I should know this guy and maybe I do but I can’t place him…

Buy Haight St. Posse

Bohemian Ghosts by Dewey Paul Moffit

A memoir of a life spent following his heart into a wild world of sex, drugs, rock and roll, celebrity friendships, Rainbow Gatherings, biker gangs, hitchhiking, UFO sightings, and, finally, true love. From his parking lot days to working backstage for rock impresario Bill Graham, the book examines how that wild counter-culture world impacted his early adult years and allowed him to discover his passion for the concert industry. These are the true tales of a modern day psychedelic adventurer.

Buy Bohemian Ghosts

Tour Head: “I Was an Acid Fueled Teenage Dead Fiend!” by Nordy

Our young lives became a part of the Grateful Dead shows and a part of the parking lot scene that evolved into Shakedown Street. Tour Head opens a window to the ways of the road and the extreme lengths Tour Heads will go to, just to get that miracle ticket and be at one more Grateful Dead gig! A humorous, yet unflinching look at a life spent in pursuit of a musical dream. Told from the perspective of someone who is not a musician in a traveling band, just a rabid fan, so obsessed that depression would set in if a few shows were missed!

Buy Tour Head by Nordy

Diary Of A Deadhead: A Wild Magical Ride into the World of Sound and Vibration by Candace Carson

Part memoir, part American history, this is one woman’s spiritual adventure following The Grateful Dead. Amid the wild and colorful world of sound and vibration, Carson found salvation in the music.
The live performances became her church, a place where she could dance her way to joy, wisdom, and oneness in the uniquely intertwined theater where the audience partnered with the band in bringing the music to life.

Buy Diary Of A Deadhead

Grateful Memories; Ten Years on the Road Taping The Grateful Dead by Jim Daley

Chronicles 10 years of life on the road, from 1979 through 1989, following the Grateful Dead on tour across America with a core group of friends while recording the music along the way.

Buy Grateful Memories

Tangled Up In New York: Shakedown on the Streets…Tales of Tenacity and Pulp Solicitation by Howard F. Weiner

[Oh my gosh! This is SO meta, I’m sure I’m going to love it – and it’s a journal!!!]
A quintessential tale of a New Yorker manifesting destiny on his own terms, this second book offering is the saga of a salesman who bagged his day job to hustle books on the streets of New York. Join Howard “Catfish” Weiner as he hauls his Dylan/Dead book “A Tale of Twisted Fate” from Battery Park to Yankee Stadium in search of an audience for his prose. Weiner does a great job of showing the sides and personality of New York’s freaks and characters that you won’t see elsewhere. Join Catfish as he becomes one with his environment, fusing with the strange brew of humanity stampeding through the asphalt jungle.

Buy Tangled Up In New York

The Grateful Pilgrimage: Time Travel with the Dead by Howard F. Weiner

Revisiting all the stops of the Grateful Dead’s 1983 fall tour on the anniversary dates of the shows, Weiner analyzes the band’s transcendent music in the places where it was created four decades earlier while reflecting on his own vast touring experiences from this era. The pilgrimage rolls through essential Dead stomping grounds like Madison Square Garden and the Hartford Civic Center, as well as returning to Lake Placid, site of a legendary Dead show three years after “The Miracle on Ice.” On the tour’s off days, Weiner visits other iconic venues where the band once jammed. Road trips past and present roll into one as this journey down Deadhead Highway gives us a glimpse into the evolution of American road adventure. You can’t tour with the Grateful Dead anymore, but you can follow in their footsteps and let the music and memories soothe your soul.

Buy The Grateful Pilgrimage

The Deadhead Cyclist by Stew Sallo

The Deadhead Cyclist may be the most unique book ever written about the Grateful Dead. Each of the book’s 52 chapters features a Grateful Dead concert pick for that week, and offers a Life Lesson, gleaned from a specific lyric of a song performed at that concert. As such, the book is not just for fans of the Grateful Dead, and not just for cyclists, but for anyone searching for a set of guiding principles to live by for a full, happy, and successful life, no matter what your passions might be.

Buy The Deadhead Cyclist

Golden Wisdom from the Grateful Dead: Life Lessons in their Songs by Charles Beard

Much has been made about the ambiguities built into Grateful Dead lyrics. With open-ended interpretation, Dead Heads can frequently find a lyric that is appropriate for many of life’s circumstances. However, Beard’s version of the meaning and impact of these lyrics is solely his own. This book examines a wide variety of Dead tunes, with messages that have been relevant to Beard’s life from his earliest psychedelic encounter “on the bus” with the band, to the later anthem of resilience, “we will survive”. Similar to gold, this wisdom continues to enrich Beard’s life. He invites you to find new appreciation for words that “glow with the gold of sunshine”.

Buy Golden Wisdom

Dark Stars & Anti-Matter: 40 Years of Loving, Leaving and Making Up with the Music of the Grateful Dead by Gene Sculatti

A memoir about growing up, music-obsessed, in the Bay Area in the 1960s. The piece is personal and frank, and should strike a chord with anyone who’s ever fallen hard for what their ears took in. Sculatti has been writing about music and popular culture since 1966 for publications including Rolling Stone, the Los Angeles Times, and Creem.

Buy Dark Stars & Anti-Matter

Grateful Dead Tour Tales: Volume One: 1984-1987 by George Michaels

The story of a young rock music fan growing up in New Jersey who one day discovers the Grateful Dead, and his whole life changes. This comical, coming-of-age tale takes us from “Saratoga to Stockholm” on Rock’s most legendary trip. Volume One explores the band’s rise from relative obscurity in the early days of MTV to their triumphant yet surprising success.

Buy Tour Tales Vol. One

Grateful Dead Tour Tales Two by George Michael

It’s now nineteen eighty-eight, and for better or for worse, the Grateful Dead are back in style. In volume two, the stakes are raised as George and his friends begin to grow up and become more and more dedicated. Can they still find fun in all this repetition? Will they be able to survive in a post “Touch of Grey” world? Where’s the Dog Star? Find out the answer to these and many more questions in Tour Tales Two, the uproariously funny, meaningful, and true-to-life tale about witnessing over fifty Dead shows during the years 1988 & ‘89.

Buy Tour Tales Vol. Two

Once Upon a Time on Grateful Dead Tour by Trina Calderón

A short story collection about the absurd and often hilarious adventures on Grateful Dead tour. Based on true stories of the thriving counterculture during the notorious U.S. federal “war on drugs” campaign, experience the magic of driving across the country to get to the next show. Follow the kids from one hotel room to the next, from Haight Street to Vermont, for a strong dose of the real American Dream: sex, drugs, and rock ‘n’ roll!

Buy Once Upon a Time

Fingers and Sunshine: Sic Itur Ad Astra by David McKibben

Follows fifteen years of travel and music making of a three man acoustic guitar band from dirt-hippiedom to heavy-ish regional radio airplay, including a six week period when they left one car in Rhode Island and another in California while following the Grateful Dead spring tour of 1987.

Buy Fingers and Sunshine

This Darkness Has Got to Give: Post-Kindergarten Lessons from the Grateful Dead by Donn Kenneth Harris

This coming-of-age memoir is a unique portrait of America’s last half-century, at times hopeful, at others harsh and enraged. Harris follows The Grateful Dead across parts of three decades, while pursuing his own high-impact passions in an edgy, diverse life: high school dropout, peacetime soldier, actor, public arts school principal, Harley-Davidson rider, and world traveler. Harris makes a compelling case for a different way of living in the millennium, valuing authenticity and inspiration, living life as fueled by poetry and music and the beckoning unknown.

Buy This Darkness Got to Give

Letters from Marion: A Deadhead’s Journey from Peace to a Supermax Prison by Joel Blaeser

[Based on videos I have seen of the author, it seems like this book might be rather violent, but I must admit I haven’t read it yet.]

Chronicles a journey that begins with the author’s trek across the globe following the Grateful Dead, then spanning the six federal prisons in which he did time, including USP Marion, the most dangerous federal super maximum prison ever built. “People don’t know what it is like to spend time in prison. They don’t know that a peace loving, non-violent “hippie-Deadhead” can end up serving hard time – really hard time. They don’t know you can be a kid traveling around to see a band one day and be tossed in with hardened criminals the next. They don’t know the guards are as corrupt as the criminals.” This intriguing look at life behind bars breaks many myths about the War on Drugs, the American prison system and race relations in America.

Buy Letters from Marion

Confessions of a Dead Head; Trips and Travels with a Magical Band by The Starburst Commander aka Bob Drobatz

It’s not a long book, and it is fun to read – it flows like talking to a new friend in the lot or a campground, and hearing some good old show stories. There are a lot of good memories packed into this book, do not let it’s size deceive you. Meaty detailed confessions!!! The Starburst Commander leads you on his journey, and it’s like you are on tour together.

Buy Confessions

Roll With It: A Trip Back to the ’90s – Gen X Style by Brad Porteus

[I love the tag line in the description (and also on the back of the book!) –] – “(Questionable choice for book club)”

Roll With It is a love letter to Generation X. A time machine to the ‘90s, capturing a snapshot of humanity’s final Slacker-friendly years before a technological tidal wave would render things utterly unrecognizable.
Through an unlikely sequence of events while pursuing a childhood dream of working in sports, our hero finds himself the General Manager of a professional roller hockey team in the zany up-start Roller Hockey International, completely out of his depth.
Flashbacks to road trips, dive bars, locker rooms, Dead shows, and blind dates celebrate the improvisational superpower an entire generation utilized to MacGyver our way through a world that transmogrified beneath our feet.
But, it’s cool. We rolled with it.

Buy Roll With It

TEN RULES OF THE ROAD I LEARNED AT MY FIRST CONCERT: AN ORDINARY GUY’S LIFETIME OF LIVE ROCK & ROLL by Speedy

This is one ordinary guy’s saga of 160 concerts over the last 44 years. From scalping tickets to catch Captain Fantastic at the height of his success to missing the opportunity to see Sir Paul close down Shea Stadium; from meeting one band in the middle of 43rd street to watching another play in a parking lot; from seeing a crowd throw objects at an amateur lead-in band to hearing two legends, Macca and Bruce, play “I Saw Her Standing There” – twice; from never seeing Van Morrison play “Someone Like You” to having him surprise us all with a rendition of “Send In The Clowns”; from attending a concert that never started to being at a show that we wouldn’t let end; the “Ten Rules Of The Road” have marked the moments of my journey from August 15, 1976 right through today.

Buy Ten Rules of the Road

Back from the Dead by Bill Walton

Yeah – a memoir by Bill Walton counts!

“An elegiac yet exuberant memoir” Bill Walton’s memoir about his recovery from debilitating physical injury and how lessons from John Wooden at UCLA and the music of the Grateful Dead inspired his darkest hours.  From The New York Times Book Review

Buy Back from the Dead

We Miss You Jerry by Rick Webber

Rick Webber was a Jerry Garcia fan first, and a Grateful Dead fan next. As a young college student, he pursued the Jerry Garcia Band across multiple venues; going on many missions and adventures with his friends to experience the Jerry Garcia Band magic as many times as he could. Along the way, he managed to meet The Man himself, Jerry Garcia. He got his autograph. He took painstaking notes and kept copies of the JGB’s set lists. He kept every bit of memorabilia he could collect and treasured every picture he had. And now he wants to share that epic, adventurous, touching journey with you, in this beautifully illustrated memoir of his JGB adventures; complete with never-before-shared pictures, ticket stubs, and additional memorabilia.

Buy We Miss You Jerry

Improvised Lives by David Gans

I admit, I struggled with whether or not to include Gans’ book because 1 – he had pretty good access to the band for decades and 2 – he’s a friend of mine. But this book is definitely a Deadhead Memoir so it makes my list.

From the intro – “I became a Deadhead almost against my will. In early 1972 I was a young singer-songwriter in San Jose, smoking pot and writing songs and playing gigs in wine bars and coffee houses. I was into the Beatles, Dylan, CSN, Cat Stevens, Jackson Browne, Elton John, et al. What little I knew of the Grateful Dead did not appeal to me, although I later figured out I had heard and enjoyed some of their songs on the radio without knowing who it was. Song titles like “Ripple” (a song about cheap wine? I think not!), “New Speedway Boogie,” and “Cumberland Blues” put me off, because I wasn’t much interested in blues and boogie. Imagine my surprise when I eventually heard those songs!”

Buy Improvised Lives

Convictions of a Chef by Evan Marcus-Rotman

Convictions of a Chef is a prison memoir, a travel memoir and a chef’s memoir all rolled into one. It’s the story of how one boy grew into a man in the trenches of a cruel and senseless drug war, and embraced food, music and travel with all that he had. Busted for LSD in his early twenties, Marcus-Rotman sets off on an epic journey searching for a settling presence in his transient life. Aided by magic mushrooms and the music of the Grateful Dead, he just might find it.

Buy Convictions of a Chef

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Compiled Deadhead Stories


Deadheads Remember Englishtown ’77: The Largest Gathering in New Jersey History by Jim Daley

Everyone agrees that the Dead’s performance at Englishtown on Sept. 3, 1977, was something special. In this tribute to the band he loves so much, the author commemorates the landmark concert by sharing memories from those who were there. Discover what it was really like on that hot, humid day at Raceway Park in Old Bridge, New Jersey, and how – at least for the day – The Grateful Dead got everything “Just exactly perfect”.

Buy Remember Englishtown

Meeting Jerry Garcia and The Grateful Dead: Deadheads share their memories, experiences and insights by Martin Stockhauser

Here is a collection of Deadheads telling their stories, sharing their insights, discussing their ideas and opinions, and talking about these memories with other Deadheads and the Band. A great compendium of stories from the earliest days through the jamband post-Jerry revival of today. Touches on all the big topics and then some. Best keyboardist? Best lineup? Compiled and self-published by a young Austrian fan.

Buy Meeting Jerry Garcia

After All is Said and Done: Taping the Grateful Dead, 1965-1995 by Mark A. Rodriguez

A saga of homegrown psychedelia, anarchic graphic styles, and black market fandom as written in magnetic tape. By the time they stopped performing in 1995, the Grateful Dead had become an international institution with archival recordings both official and bootlegged. The cultural significance of these bootlegs – live concert cassettes which solidified the Dead’s legendary status – is utterly unique in the annals of music. The story of their creation and endless proliferation is a people’s history unto itself. Featuring dozens of interviews as well as the show-stopping visuals from hundreds of archival cassette covers, this is a fantastic exploration of that history.

Buy After All is Said and Done

Deadheads: Stories from Fellow Artists, Friends & Followers of the Grateful Dead by Linda Kelly

Just what was it about the Grateful Dead that made them rock and roll’s most beloved band? First-show revelations, backstage adventures, parking lot hoopla, how-to-live-life philosophies, strange tangential experiences stemming from being in that certain place at that certain time – these intriguing anecdotes evoke wonderful images, lots of smiles, and a close look into a fascinating phenomenon in the history of music.

Buy Deadheads by Linda Kelly

[A collective effort, born online, produced two fun books – ]

Deadhead Stories: If I Told You All That Went Down It Would Burn Off Both Your Ears

We invite you to take a trip with us on our adventures with the Grateful Dead and beyond. In December 2017, a merry band of Pranksters of all ages and stripes embarked on a mission to share and preserve Deadhead history, from the perspective of the fans.

What emerged is “Deadhead Stories,” an 8.5 x 11-inch, 350-page, color, coffee table book. Woven from the freely donated contributions of storytellers, photographers, artists, editors, a graphic designer, and thousands of kind folks from around the globe, this book is truly a collective collaboration.

Buy Deadhead Stories Vol. One

Deadhead Stories “Bound to cover just a little more ground”

This is the second volume of stories collected and produced by a diverse group of volunteers who came together to form Laughing Water, the production division of the Merlin/Mercury Non-Profit Corporation. Laughing Water is deadicated to enriching the Grateful Dead Family by engaging crowd-sourced ideas that add value to our community, not only through the proceeds they generate or meeting the need they seek to address, but also through the magic created when we collectively endeavor to manifest an idea.

Buy Deadhead Stories Vol. Two

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Fun and/or Scholarly books by Deadheads, showcasing how the Dead has affected every aspect of American culture.


Gratefully Tattooed – A Coffee Table Book

The FIRST EVER cataloged and published image collection of Grateful Dead inspired tattoos. This book offers a look at some wildly psychedelic and colorful art and some insight into the fans who entrust these artists with expressing their devotion to what they love. It celebrates all who draw inspiration from the music that has touched their souls and changed their lives forever.
Featured Artists – Salem Ofa • Danny Reed • Fernando Lions • Dustin Leach • Elisa Rose Mountain • Emily Hefley • Michael Bartkowiak • Ben Corn• Wayne Baechle • Gordo Dedda • Lincoln Rust • Daniel Albrigo

Buy Gratefully Tattooed

The Economic History of the Grateful Dead: A Look Inside the Financial Records of America’s Biggest 20th Century Touring Act by David A. Davis

This is a quirky look at The Grateful Dead’s existence viewed almost entirely through financial and business documents. The Grateful Dead collected and retained many of their records in hundreds of banker boxes that are archived at the University of California at Santa Cruz. This Deadhead author worked in entertainment finance for 35 years, analyzing financial documents. What better way to spend retirement than digging in to the details of The Dead’s financial life.
The Dead changed the face of touring musical acts through a series of innovations that they brought to the business: such as always being on tour, pioneering better sound and light technology, initiating t-shirt sales, venue selection, multi-night runs and long-term promoter relationships, all of which combined to create what became the biggest American touring act.
The documents and the contracts almost always speak for themselves, and there’s a fantastic story here.

Buy Economics of the GD

Deadhead Social Science: ‘You Ain’t Gonna Learn What You Don’t Want to Know’ Edited by Rebecca G. Adams and Robert Sardiello

A collection of scholarly papers examining various aspects of the complex subculture surrounding the Grateful Dead. What is a Deadhead? How does a Deadhead identity evolve? Why would a person choose an identity that is often viewed negatively by larger society? Why are Deadheads viewed negatively by the larger society? Is the Deadhead community a religion? How did a rock band develop a religious type following? The book also examines the role of vendors, and the reaction by “host” communities to the crowds that accompanied Grateful Dead concerts.

Buy Deadhead Social Science

Why the Grateful Dead Matter by Michael Benson

A lifelong Deadhead argues that the Grateful Dead are not simply a successful rock-and-roll band but a phenomenon central to American culture. He defends the proposition that the Dead are, in fact, a musical movement as transformative as any -ism in the artistic history of this century and the last. And a lot more fun than most. From the street festivals of Haight-Ashbury, to the ecstatic outpouring of joy at Soldier Field, Chicago in the summer of 2015, the Grateful Dead have been at the center of American culture for more than fifty years.

Buy The Grateful Dead Matter

Skeleton Key – A Dictionary For Deadheads by David Shenk and Steve Silberman

Deadheads have built an original and authentic American subculture, with vivid jargon, rich lore, and its own legends, myths, and spirituality. Informative reading for the new fan or the most grizzled “tourhead”. Filled with Deadheads’ own stories, wit, insiders’ knowledge, sincere appreciation of the music, and the diverse and soulful culture it inspires, this puts you on the Merry Pranksters’ bus behind the real Cowboy Neal, uncovers the origins of Cherry Garcia, follows the dancing bear on its trip from psychedelic artifact to trademarked icon, and unlocks the Dead’s own tape vault.

Buy Skeleton Key

Live Dead: The Grateful Dead, Live Recordings, and the Ideology of Liveness by John Brackett

The Grateful Dead’s reputation as a “live band” was – and continues to be – sustained by thousands of live concert recordings from every era of the group’s long and colorful career. Brackett examines how live recordings have shaped the general history and popular mythology of the Grateful Dead. Drawing on a diverse array of materials and documents contained in the Grateful Dead Archive, Live Dead details how live recordings became meaningful among the band and their fans not only as sonic souvenirs of past musical performances but also as expressions of assorted ideals, including notions of “liveness,” authenticity, and the power of recorded sound.

Buy Live Dead

Dead Style: A Long Strange Trip into the Magical World of Tie-Dye by Mordechai “Mister Mort” Rubinstein

[I know there are going to be some haters with this book, but this book positively amazes me – 1 – that the fashion scene is like this – and 2 – that there’s a book about it!]

Since the formation of Dead & Company, a new breed of Deadhead has emerged: someone who appreciates stylish streetwear as much as tie-dye. This book spotlights the influence of the Grateful Dead and hippie culture on the current world of fashion. Tie-dyed pieces from designer labels like Louis Vuitton, Off-White, Saint Laurent, Balenciaga, Missoni, and Burberry have dominated runway looks. Vintage Grateful Dead shirts are fetching hundreds of dollars online and in stores. This book, visually driven and heavily captioned, is a look book for current Deadhead culture a surprising, provocative, engaging, and fun work. A Grateful Dead book for a new generation.

Buy Dead Style

Everything I Know About Business I Learned from the Grateful Dead: The Ten Most Innovative Lessons from a Long, Strange Trip by Barry Barnes PhD

This overview of the Deadhead nation reads like a candid rock biography as well as an insightful business manual, convincing us that the Dead’s influence on the business world will turn out to be a significant part of their legacy. Without intending to, the band pioneered ideas and practices that were subsequently embraced by American corporations. Explore the ten most innovative business lessons from the Dead’s illustrious career, and consider – What might your business learn from their long, strange trip?

Buy Everything About Business

Marketing Lessons from the Grateful Dead: What Every Business Can Learn from the Most Iconic Band in History by David Meerman Scott and Brian Halligan

It’s no real surprise that the key to innovation is rejecting conventional wisdom. The Grateful Dead broke almost every rule in the music industry book. They encouraged their fans to record shows and trade tapes; they built a mailing list and sold concert tickets directly to fans; and they built their business model on live concerts, not album sales. The Dead pioneered marketing concepts that are successfully used by businesses across all industries today. Scott and Halligan do a great job of weaving their personal and professional experiences into a coherent read, which is admirable considering that some of their personal experiences are probably incoherent.

Buy Marketing Lessons

Cornell ’77: The Music, the Myth, and the Magnificence of the Grateful Dead’s Concert at Barton Hall by Peter Conners

[This because I do enjoy Peter Conners’ writing.]

On May 8, 1977, at Barton Hall, on the Cornell University campus, in front of 8,500 eager fans, the Grateful Dead played a show so significant that the Library of Congress inducted it into the National Recording Registry. Many Deadheads claim that the quality of the live recording of the show, made by Betty Cantor-Jackson (a member of the crew), elevated its importance. Once those recordings—referred to as “Betty Boards”—began to circulate among Deadheads, the reputation of the Cornell ’77 show grew exponentially. With time, the show at Barton Hall acquired legendary status in the community of Deadheads and audiophiles.

Buy Cornell ’77

The Complete Annotated Grateful Dead Lyrics by David Dodd

An avid Grateful Dead concertgoer for more than two decades, David Dodd is a librarian who brings to the work a detective’s love of following a clue as far as it will take him. Including essays by Dead lyricists Robert Hunter and John Perry and Jim Carpenter’s original illustrations, whimsical elements in the lyrics are brought to light, showcasing the American legend that is present in so many songs. A gorgeous keepsake edition of the Dead’s official annotated lyrics

Buy Annotated Lyrics

The Grateful Dead and Philosophy: Getting High Minded about Love and Haight by Steve Gimbel

The Grateful Dead and Philosophy contains essays from 20 professional philosophers whose love of the Dead’s music and scene have led them to reflect on different philosophical questions that have arisen from the enigma that is the Grateful Dead. Coming at the Dead from a variety of perspectives, ancient and modern, Eastern and Western, this book considers how the group fits into the broader trends of American thought running through pragmatism and the Beat poets. There’s a pertinent analysis of how the parking lot scene with its tie-dyed t-shirt and veggie burrito vendors was both a rejection and embrace of capitalism, and much more.

Buy Grateful Dead and Philosophy

Deadheads and Christians: You Will Know Them By Their Love by Thomas A. Coogan

A peace-and-love movement that began with itinerants living hand to mouth at the fringes of society and referring to one another as brother and sister continues to flourish decades after the death of its leader. This book explores the ways in which that description applies equally well to the early days of the Jesus movement, as recorded in Scripture, and to the current stage of the Deadhead movement, which, with the recent successful tours by Dead and Company, is as robust as ever, thirty years after the last concert by the Grateful Dead. This book is about the common attributes of Deadheads; it is not about the music they love nor the band that created that music. Its purpose is to invite people of faith to judge whether something of the same divine Spirit that animated the early Church is at work today among the Deadheads.

Buy Deadheads & Christians

The Emperor Wears No Clothes: A History of Cannabis/Hemp/Marijuana by Jack Herer

[We’re lucky enough to have mostly legal pot these days but this was such an important book for us. Originally published in 1985, it’s still worth reading.]

THE OFFICIAL 14TH EDITION! In this thoroughly researched, scrupulously annotated and shockingly provocative book you’ll learn: * How and why cannabis prohibition began and what that has meant to America. * The straight dope on marijuana smoking and the effects on the human body. * Who profits from the prohibition and criminalization of cannabis. *And more! Includes Jack’s original research in the back. The most complete and most popular book about Cannabis/Hemp in history, The Emperor Wears No Clothes is still required reading for anyone interested in how this plant can heal themselves, their families and the planet.

Buy Emperor Wears No Clothes

Grateful Birds by Govinda Holtby and Matt Holtby

This book is a fundraiser for two non-profits: LittleBIGFest, and Whidbey Audubon Society. The book takes a look at 40 Grateful Dead songs, and pairs them with 40 Washington State birds, plus an encore bird, and encore song. We carve the connection between birders and deadheads. The book is filled with fun facts, unusual facts, and interesting facts about the bird and or the song that it is paired up with.

Buy Grateful Birds

Kind Veggie Burritos: The Cookbook For Deadheads Everywhere
by Beth Livingston

I got the idea of writing this book all the way back in 1991 when, in between tours, I started jonesing, not only for the music, but for some really good parking lot food. Truth was, I never could get my stir-fry exactly right, and oh, those burritos! Finally, in 1995, my cookbook was born! This book is my way of celebrating my own joyful ride on The Bus since my first show– that killer show at Princeton, April 17, 1971. All proceeds (after expenses,) are donated to SEVA, the Rex Foundation, and, since 2022, to the humanitarian efforts in Ukraine, too.

Buy Kind Veggie Burritos

Perspectives on the Grateful Dead: Critical Writings by Robert G. Weiner (editor)

These twenty-two essays, grouped by subject, attest to the varied fields of interest the band and its followers, known as Deadheads, have affected, including psychology, law, and ethnomusicology. The contributions explore the diversity of the culture of fans, empirically analyze the music, apply literary criticism to the lyrics, and explore Dead-related philosophical and theological concepts ― in other words, they are as eclectic as the myriad Grateful Dead fans themselves.

Buy Perspectives


There’s so much fiction with a Dead theme… I’m sure I haven’t found them all… But I keep looking!


Tiger in a Trance: A Novel by Max Ludington

Perfectly capturing the drug induced euphoria and paranoia of a Grateful Dead concert, while probing the self-destructive tendencies of its headstrong protagonist eighteen-year-old Jason Burke who discovers how much more lucrative selling acid is than selling T-shirts. Liberally dabbling in his product, his judgment gets cloudier and he starts snorting heroin and sleeping with his supplier’s girlfriend. Jason also meets Melanie, a rebellious one-armed high-school girl who’s youthful abandonment leads her deeper into the nomadic world of the Dead. As his addiction takes hold, Jason reacquaints himself with an old friend of his late father’s. While he struggles with the ghosts of his past and his exceedingly tenuous future, Jason has to decide where his heart lies and which road will ultimately take him there.

Buy Tiger in a Trance

Thorn Tree: A Novel by Max Ludington

[Max Luddington wrote a new book! I haven’t read this yet.]

Daniel lives quietly in the Hollywood Hills, and is best known for one seminal artwork – Thorn Tree – a hulking, welded, scrap metal sculpture that he built in the Mojave desert in the 1970s. The work emerged from tragedy, but building it kept Daniel alive. His neighbor Celia, a charismatic but fragile actress also experienced youthful fame, but saw her life nearly collapse after a series of bad decisions. Now, a new movie with a notorious director might reignite her career. Celia’s father Jack stays with her young son for weeks at a time while she’s on location. Jack and Daniel strike up a tentative friendship, but something about Jack seems off. Perhaps Jack is not the harmless grandparent he pretends to be. Perhaps everyone harbors fifty-year-old secrets. Thrumming with the sounds of the Grateful Dead, Thorn Tree masterfully weaves the idealism and the darkness of the late 1960s, and the mania of Charles Manson and other cults, with the glossy surfaces of Los Angeles today.

Buy Thorn Tree

Polaroids From The Dead by Douglas Coupland

This is a crackling collection of takes on life and death in North America. From a sweeping portrait of Grateful Dead culture, to the deaths of Kurt Cobain, Marilyn Monroe and the middle class, Coupland’s razor-sharp insights delve into what it means to be human in an age of technology. It’s a skillful combination of stories, fact and fiction – keen outtakes on life in the late 20th century, exploring a society obsessed with celebrity, crime and death.

Buy Polaroids From The Dead

Scarlet Begonias by Stephanie Geman-Marcotte

[I often recommend this Sci-Fi book to any viciously smart science-minded types I meet. The Dead and one concert in particular play an integral part in the plot. Good stuff!]

Is it possible to unravel the ego, and if so, to what end? When Suzi Greenberg unravels her ego down to a diaphanous veil of awareness, the Psycho-Cartographers are compelled to intervene. Using an elixir for perceptual evolution to guide them, they borrow an imperceptible quantity of drifting mass from the International Prototype Kilogram and power a sonic black-hole to generate a rift in the dreamscape where the fate of Suzi’s jeopardized identity and the universally accepted concepts of duality, observation and existence itself hang in the balance.

Buy Scarlet Begonias

After Lucy: A Novel by Daniel Jones

Just three weeks after Porter’s wife, Lucy, dies from breast cancer, he decides that more than anything he and his two children need to go on an adventure. In an impulsive move, he trades his wife’s Mazda for a dilapidated, hippie-mobile camper, ignores the disapproval of Lucy’s grieving parents and takes twelve-year-old Kaylie and eight-year-old Ben on a trip that he hopes will mend their broken hearts. The journey quickly veers away from its intended route, however, plunging Porter into an exploration of choices made years earlier that derailed his dreams. Chance encounters help him realize that he must face his sorrow and restart his life. Jones captures a comic, light undertone in this story of a family learning to cope and move on.

Buy After Lucy

Tales Of Tour by Alex Kolker

[I can find no synopsis of this anywhere so here’s my own notes I wrote to myself about it.]

These are cute little stories that take place mostly on Dead Tour, though there is one that takes place on Phish Tour. They exemplify many typical scenes of lot life. There’s the bad trip, the mom who hunts down her runaway teen, the dad who tries to find his daughter, a frisbee that makes the rounds. Like I said, cute. My favorite aspect is the final page – the author says he’ll send the book free to anyone in the federal penal system.
[I do not know if that is still the case.]

Buy Tales Of Tour

Might As Well by Dean Budnick

Here the rich tapestry of the Grateful Dead scene in the late eighties is presented via an engaging account of one evening both inside and outside of a concert at New Jersey’s Meadowlands Arena. Events unfold through the eyes of seven characters, including three-year-old Stella attending with her Deadhead mother, prep school hippie Steven on spring break with his crew, Taper Ted on hand to record the music alongside his skeptical brother, and trusty, crusty vendor Bagel Bob approaching his second decade on tour. Inspired in part by a true-crime incident involving a still-unsolved fatality, this book explores the challenges, complications, and charms of the Grateful Dead environment with insight, empathy, and humor.

Buy Might As Well

Freaked by J. T. Dutton

It’s 1993, and there’s a lot going wrong in Scotty Loveletter’s life. His goldfish has died, his well-known sex-therapist mother is considering posing for Playboy, his stepfather is getting ready to fly the coop and he’s stuck at a “last-resort” boarding school. When his drug-dealing roommate whisks him and a “townie” classmate away to attend Jerry Garcia’s Freedom Concert on Long Island, Scotty has little idea of the adventures that are in store, which include being ditched at Grand Central Terminal and getting into the concert without a ticket. Dutton’s debut will appeal most to readers who share Scotty’s taste in music and recreation. Others may find the rambling narrative, 1990s setting and references, and over-the-top antics hard to get into.

[Well, that’s one way to put it. This is a YA book and I cannot in any way say that this was a good book. lol. Truth though. This may well be the very worst book on my list – at least among the ones I’ve read – and that’s gotta count for something, right? Yes, it absolutely counts for something… If you are JT Dutton, I truly don’t mean to insult you. Writing a book is damn hard, I get it, but methinks if you had told me this was your character’s 2nd show, instead of declaring it to be his 45th, you’d have gotten a lot more leeway in terms of what he didn’t know. Sorry. I’m opinionated. I hope you keep writing though…]

Buy Freaked

Get Outta Town: (A Tale of the Grateful Dead, the IRS, and Coffee) by Ted Ringer

It’s the story of an aging Deadhead who attends a concert in Eugene and gets caught up in an adventure that involves a greedy IRS, a delusional CIA, and the Grateful Dead! The IRS wants his money, the CIA wants his bootleg tape, and the Dead want him to stop the Coffee Cartel from destroying the rainforest. Our hero tangles with unsavory characters in Brazil, pursues true love, and tries to save the world. He makes a brave stand against the forces of bureaucracy, fast food, and evil. Written back in the day, when no one would ever say “back in the day”, Get Outta Town truly captures a time of good music, good vibes, and unlimited possibility.

Buy Get Outta Town

The Other Side of Haight: A Novel by James Fadiman

Set during the infamous “Summer of Love”, this is the story of how lives converge in the Haight-Ashbury district of San Francisco for three short but explosive months. A motley crew of dreamers join together in a psychedelic world of drugs, sex, and idealism. As housemates Shadow, Dancer, and Sweeps innocently come of age and explore all that San Francisco has to offer, a government experiment involving LSD spins out of control. The two stories collide with tragic results, impacting each character in profound ways. This intimate, enthralling narrative is rich with historical detail and successfully conjures up a tumultuous time in America’s past.

Buy The Other Side of Haight

U.S. Blues by Ed Watts

Published in 2011 this is a murder mystery set in the 1985 Grateful Dead parking lot scene. This synopsis taken from an Amazon review. “You just gotta love this one. Ed Watts captures many of the quirky elements of Dead tour during this era and uses them as a backdrop for a murder mystery in this well thought out and written story. I had forgotten many of the Deadhead conspiracy theories that were highly touted by a few, but these are well-woven into this tale. Don’t take it too seriously, just have a nice relaxing read in a very non-conventional scene.”

Buy U.S. Blues

Fellow Traveler: A Rock & Roll Fable by James D McCallister

A novel melding the southern literary family drama with a Grateful Dead-inspired hippy path of self-discovery. Follow the journey of Z, an aging, shiftless, Gen X wastrel in search of meaning, if not actual identity. Ashton Tobias Zemp goes by many names, as did other ‘flower children’ when on tour following legendary 60s band Jack O’Roses around the country. Years after the death of Rose Partland, the figurehead at the center of the Jack O’Roses pop cultural phenomenon, Z returns to South Carolina, the land of his birth. The goal? To recover from the loss of his marriage, his best friend Brian, and worst of all, the loss of his sense of self – this is a crisis much worse than the loss of a famous rock star… right?

Buy Fellow Traveler

Random Notes from a Specific Deadhead by Terry Shaffer

Garcia Hunter is a pot-smoking Deadhead immersed in the corrupt world of Pennsylvania politics. After fifteen years in the employ of his lifelong friend, State Representative Delano Trodske, Garcia’s sense of right and wrong has been horribly twisted and he is determined to regain his lost integrity. With the guidance of his cat, the ghost of Jerry Garcia, and the lyrics of Robert Hunter will he find his way back to himself? Will Garcia be able to reclaim his soul, salvage the political system, and find the true meaning of love and success amid all this pot smoke? Will he see the larger patterns and come to appreciate the true nature of reality? And surely, no-one as insignificant as he could be receiving guidance from cosmic forces he can neither identify nor understand… A highly entertaining romp through the world of politics, spiritual development, and personal truths.

Buy Random Notes

Birdenwheel by Lindsay Rice

It’s Summer Tour, and Devon Maxwell, ex-con and Deadhead, longs to be a father to his seven-year-old daughter, but her mother tries to keep him away. At the same time, he seeks a metaphysical escape and wants to transform into a raven. He’s pulled between his ache to be with Emma, and the wish to fly. Twenty-something Rowen avoids his grief after the death of his mom by continually following The Grateful Dead. He lures Cass, into the scene with him, but she remains naïve to the complexities of Rowen’s escape from grief. Rowen’s grandmother tracks the mystery of an old quilt hanging on the wall of her remote New Mexico cabin. She finds a musical ancestor from Appalachia who traveled the country and directs his influence toward her grandson. As summer tour progresses, Cass becomes key for Rowen to deal with his grief, and Devon protects his daughter before he can fly away. Stories are connected in surprising ways. The ties between these characters are as deep and mystical as the bonds between dancing strangers in the thrall of great music.

Buy Birdenwheel

The Millennium Shows by Philip Baruth

This is a tale of displacement, angst, love, and the struggle of a regular guy to maintain his autonomy in the face of an intrusive and increasingly hive-like society. We move through the underworld of traveling families bound together and wrenched apart by the encroaching pressures of surviving outside mainstream America with our conflicted narrator, Story. Burrowing deep into the darker side of Deadhead culture,
Story takes the reader along for the ride. “Most mornings we rippled into consciousness”, Story says, always viewing his world with languid vividness. It isn’t until well into this finely nuanced novel that our protagonist’s steady, omniscient tone begins unraveling. What’s going on here?

Buy The Millennium Shows

This Darkness Got to Give by Dave Housley

This is a story to die for…
Cain lives the unconventional life of a Deadhead. A vampire determined to fly below the governmental radar, he has carefully constructed his life into one of sheep’s blood and self-control. Drugs aren’t really his thing considering the circumstances, but it only takes one dose from a stranger for Cain’s world to collapse around him and end in what he’d been determined to avoid: murder. Bodies mount as Cain’s control frays, and more than one government agency takes notice. The FBI sends Jenkins, a methodical agent who has experience with vampires, and the secretive Invasive Species Division sends Peter, a rootless recent grad who fits a strange list of qualifications. The closer those on Cain’s trail get, the less straightforward capturing him becomes, until decades-old governmental secrets come to light and those responsible must face justice, one way or another…

Buy This Darkness Got to Give

Sunshine Daydream: A Novel by Bethany Miller

To have a future, Bailey must let go of the past. Bailey holds tight to those she loves— her mom and niece, people she grew up with, friends from her days following the Grateful Dead. She keeps new relationships superficial, unable to stand the idea of letting someone in knowing someday she’ll lose them. She doesn’t worry about having feelings for Teague. The uptight lawyer is in Vermont for a single purpose – to find a way to get his brother out of jail, then he’s going home. But as weeks turn to months, it becomes obvious there’s a reason he spends his days hanging out at Bailey’s instead of going back to his life. With Teague, Bailey finally begins to recover from long ago loss. But when her absentee boyfriend shows up, she’s forced to choose between the safety of what she’s always known, or opening her heart to the love she never saw coming.

Buy Sunshine Daydream by B. Miller

Friend of the Devil: Crime Fiction Inspired by the Songs of the Grateful Dead

Editor Josh Pachter presents an anthology of stories inspired by lyrics from the Dead’s music. Contributors include some of the finest contemporary authors of short crime fiction, such as award winners Bruce Robert Coffin, James D.F. Hannah, Vinnie Hansen, James L’Etoile, G.M. Malliet, Twist Phelan, Faye Snowden, and Joseph S. Walker. Also on board are Alfred Hitchcock’s Mystery Magazine editor Linda Landrigan (with her first published story!), married couple Kathryn O’Sullivan and Paul Awad, Flemish writer Dominique Biebau, David Avallone (son of the legendary crime writer Michael Avallone), and more.
These fifteen tales will appeal to aficionados of crime fiction and Deadheads alike, and both types of reader are sure to enjoy discovering the many Easter-egg references to the songs that inspired the stories.

Buy Friend of the Devil

Before Woodstock: The Sky River Rock Festival & Lighter Than Air Fair by J.D. Howard

In 1968, the year Before Woodstock. live music, the arts, and the counterculture came together at The Sky River Rock Festival. It was the first 3-day rock festival to ever be held at a rural undeveloped site. Sky River Rock Fest was a groundbreaking event that showcased some of the best bands of the 1960s: Santana, Country Joe & The Fish, and the Grateful Dead among them.

In this deeply researched, historically accurate, and fun novel, a reticent journalist’s assignment to cover a rock festival becomes a transformative experience. The book is filled with insight into amazing bands and their early days, as the whole world was beginning to see the first flowerings of a cultural revolution.

Buy Before Woodstock

The Storyteller Speaks: Rare & Different Fictions of the Grateful Dead by Gary McKinney & Robert G. Weiner (Editors)

A Grateful Dead-inspired collection of literary short stories. All genres represented: horror, romance, time-travel, family saga, zombie, western, science fiction, mystery noir, and much more. Authors include Robert Hunter, Philip Baruth, Ed McClanahan, Stephen Graham Jones, Mitch Myers, and many more.
“It turns out that it wasn’t only the musicians who were inspired by the phenomenon of the Grateful Dead. In this incredible pile of stories are flesh-eating zombie Jerrys, the brilliantly resurrected ghost of Neal Cassady, skeletons, drugs, life on tour, initiations, archetypal Grateful Dead folk tales, the supernatural, the science-fictional, time travel and magic, lots of magic. Not to be missed.” –Dennis McNally

Buy The Storyteller Speaks

Deadhead Forever: Property of Haze by Scott Myer

What if you bought an old Volkswagen microbus and when you cleaned it out you found an old scrapbook created by a Deadhead on Grateful Dead Tour? Well, if you did, that scrapbook might look something like this. “Discovered” wedged beneath the back seat of a 1968 Volkswagen van, this brilliant fictional scrapbook, filled with real-life memorabilia, celebrates the glory days of the Grateful Dead and the remarkable subculture that sprang up around them.

Buy Deadhead Forever

Passenger by L M Pampuro

Tangerina Hanley enjoyed following her favorite band around the country. Every show provided her with a different adventure. That is until they gave a ride to the wrong person. Weston Traynor was born to lead as head of the F.B.I. drug trafficking division. Everything is going smoothly until during a routine drug bust Weston gets a glimpse of his old flame, Tangerina. When swirling around between dancers, drug runners, and double agents, questions remain –  Who are your friends? Who is really driving?

Buy Passenger

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A Little Phish?

[These next three are Phish books, not Dead books and I struggled with whether or not to include them, but I’ve sort of become friends with the author (at least on FB) and I’d like to support her efforts. Writing a book is not easy!]


Summer Tour (A Trilogy; Book 1) by B. Elizabeth Beck

A summer adventure with Phish. Follow these characters as they jump on the train for Summer Tour 2019. When Sam spends the summer in Maywood, Ohio in the Calico House with his Aunt Karen, he meets a group of phans who change his life. Chris serves as Captain of the RV they call Suby Greenburg, Claire is an artist who does large scale art as social commentary, Taylor is a poet and Alex, being just a little older, anchors the group as wise sage.

Buy Summer Tour

World Gone Mad (A Trilogy; Book 2) by B. Elizabeth Beck

The beloved characters of SUMMER TOUR are back. We follow the kids as they navigate senior year of high school, face adversities and tragedy, and survive the effects of a global pandemic, all while holding close to their phamily. Community has been the most important aspect of being a Phish phan in 2020, and Elizabeth Beck has captured that spirit perfectly here.

Buy World Gone Mad

Under the Elm (A Trilogy; Book 3) by B. Elizabeth Beck

With a backdrop of music, friendship, sisterhood, and everything a family can be at its best, two young girls discover who they are as women and how the choices they make shape who they become. In this prequel we’ll flashback to 1979 with Karen and Maggie moving from the commune where they grew up, to Maywood, Ohio into what will become Calico House. See how they learn to adjust to a suburban lifestyle while remaining true to their love for the Grateful Dead and their hippie ways.

Buy Under the Elm

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Important Books about the history of the LSD Scene –


The Electric Kool-Aid Test by Tom Wolfe

A report on what it was like to follow along with Ken Kesey and the Merry Pranksters as they launched the “Transcontinental Bus Tour” from the West Coast to New York, all while introducing acid (then legal) to hundreds of like-minded folks, staging impromptu jam sessions, dodging the Feds, and meeting some of the most revolutionary figures of the day. An American classic and an unflinching portrait of Ken Kesey, his Merry Pranksters, LSD, and the psychedelic 1960s.

Buy EKAT

Heads: A Biography of Psychedelic America by Jesse Jarnow

Heads uncovers the hidden history of psychedelic distribution. Written for anyone who wondered what happened after the Acid Tests, through the 1970s, during the Drug War, and on to the psychedelic present. Here’s the essential history of how LSD, Deadheads, and tie-dye, have become familiar features of the American experience. It’s a guided tour of the hippie highway, filled with LSD-slinging graffiti writers in Central Park, Dead-loving scientists at Stanford University, Whole Earth homesteaders, black market chemists, bluegrass pickers, spiritual seekers, entrepreneurs, pranksters, and a nation of Deadheads.

Buy Heads by Jesse Jarnow

Bear: The Life and Times of Augustus Owsley Stanley III by Robert Greenfield

“Owsley “Bear” Stanley was an authentic shaman-alchemist whose production of millions of doses of LSD transformed a tiny San Francisco neighborhood into ground zero for a planet-wide challenge to conventional notions of reality. That he was also ornery, obsessive, and at times just plain odd was merely part of the package. Bear illuminates a fascinating story with insight and panache, and it’s essential — no Owsley, no sixties as we know them; it’s that simple”. ―Dennis McNally

Buy Bear by Robert Greenfield

Owsley and Me: My LSD Family Paperback by Rhoney Gissen Stanley

Rhoney Gissen met Owsley Bear Stanley in Berkeley, California, in 1965. In addition to being a sound engineer for the Grateful Dead, Bear made and sold lysergic acid diethylamide, otherwise known as LSD, which, at the time, was completely legal. But when the law changed, Bear became an outlaw, and Rhoney his willing accomplice. As someone who worked in the labs that produced LSD, Rhoney has firsthand knowledge of the environment surrounding the psychedelic drug in its heyday.

Buy Owsley and Me

Orange Sunshine: The Brotherhood of Eternal Love and Its Quest to Spread Peace, Love, and Acid to the World by Nicholas Schou

Dubbed the “Hippie Mafia,” the Brotherhood began in the mid-1960s as a small band of peace-loving, adventure-seeking surfers in Southern California. After discovering LSD, they took Timothy Leary’s mantra of “Turn on, tune in, and drop out” and resolved to make that vision a reality. The Brotherhood’s most legendary contribution to the drug scene was Orange Sunshine, the group’s nickname for their orange-colored acid tablet that happened to produce an especially powerful trip. Brotherhood foot soldiers passed out handfuls of the tablets to communes, at Grateful Dead concerts, and at love-ins up and down the coast of California and beyond, literally providing the fuel for the psychedelic revolution in the process.

Buy Orange Sunshine

Operation Julie: The World’s Greatest LSD Bust by Lyn Ebenezer

Part international criminal master plan, part hippie ideological adventure and in some cases, part farce. In March 1977, the largest police drugs bust in history cracked a drug ring based in rural mid-Wales. 120 people were arrested throughout the UK and France. Eventually, 17 defendants were jailed for a total of 130 years in the wake of the investigation code-named Operation Julie. Interesting not only from an investigative point of view, but also as a piece of social history. As this was in the days of no internet and mobile phone technology, it was down to good old fashioned leg work and mistakes made by the suspects that led to conviction. Good enough to be a page turner.

Buy Operation Julie

Operation White Rabbit: LSD, the DEA, and the Fate of the Acid King by Dennis McDougal

Operation White Rabbit traces the rise and fall—and rise and fall again—of the psychedelic community through the life of the man known as the “Acid King:” William Leonard Pickard. Pickard was a legitimate genius, a con artist, a womanizer, and a believer that LSD would save lives. He was a foreign diplomat, a Harvard fellow, and the biggest producer of LSD on the planet—if you believe the DEA, who said Pickard was responsible for 90 percent of the world’s production of lysergic acid. But, when the DEA declared that they found 91 pounds of LSD, it wasn’t true. In reality, the haul was seven ounces. Nor did they find the millions of dollars he supposedly amassed. But nonetheless, Pickard is now serving two consecutive life sentences without possibility of parole.

Buy Operation White Rabbit

Acid Dreams: The Complete Social History of LSD: The CIA, the Sixties, and Beyond by Martin A. Lee and Bruce Shlain

A complete social history of the psychedelic counter-culture that burst into full view in the 1960s in the US. With new information obtained through the Freedom of Information Act, we have a fascinating study of how the CIA became obsessed with LSD, a drug discovered in 1943, and how they launched a massive covert research program in which countless unwitting citizens were given acid with sometimes tragic results. Of course LSD eventually found its way to the public and this book deftly traces the way a tiny psychoactive molecule intensified each stage of the social and cultural upheavals of the Sixties.

Buy Acid Dreams

This Is Your Country on Drugs: The Secret History of Getting High in America by Ryan Grim

A well-researched, fresh perspective on the issue that will enlighten the uninitiated and surprise the expert. Prepare for a cross-country, multi-decade tour of illicit drug use in the U.S. From the DEA bust of an acid lab in in Kansas to raves and music festivals. Along the way, you’ll encounter some surprising questions. Did acid really disappear in the early 2000s? And did meth peak years ago? Do today’s teenagers spend so much time alone, online, that they do far fewer drugs than previous generations? Did our Founding Fathers – or, more preciously, their wives – get high just as much as we do? Did anti-drug campaigns actually encourage more drug use?

Buy Your Country on Drugs

White Hand Society: The Psychedelic Partnership of Timothy Leary & Allen Ginsberg by Peter Conners

In 1960 Timothy Leary was not yet famous—or infamous—and Allen Ginsberg was both. Leary, eager to expand his experiments at the Harvard Psilocybin Project to include artists and writers, knew that Ginsberg held the key to bohemia’s elite. Ginsberg, fresh from his first experience with hallucinogenic mushrooms in Mexico, was eager to promote the spiritual possibilities of psychedelic use. Thus, “America’s most conspicuous beatnik” became the Ambassador of Psilocybin under the auspices of an Ivy League professor.

Buy White Hand Society

Psychedelic Justice: Toward a Diverse and Equitable Psychedelic Culture Edited by Beatriz Caiuby Labate and Clancy Cavnar

[I don’t know yet if this book deserves to be here, but it’s here because I want to read it.]

A vision for a more inclusive psychedelic future, highlighting voices that have been long marginalized in Western psychedelic culture: women, queer people, people of color, and Indigenous people. This anthology of essays written for the Chacruna Institute examines psychedelics in the contexts of capitalism, Indigenous traditions, reciprocity, sustainability, mental health, diversity, sex, power, and more.

Buy Psychedelic Justice

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