Cannabis A natural history

Rob DeSalle

Book - 2025

The definitive story of cannabis, from its evolution and biological quirks to its role in human history. In this entertaining natural history, Rob DeSalle provides a glimpse into the biological world through the lens of the marijuana plant.

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2nd Floor New Shelf 362.295/DeSalle (NEW SHELF) Due Feb 28, 2026
Subjects
Published
New Haven : Yale University Press 2025.
Language
English
Main Author
Rob DeSalle (author)
Other Authors
Patricia Wynne (illustrator)
Physical Description
xiv, 319 pages : illustrations (black and white) ; 23 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index
ISBN
9780300270945
  • Drunken Monkeys and Stoned Spiders
  • Cannabis: A Short Cultural History
  • Origins
  • Hops and Hemp
  • A Complicated Sex Life
  • Buds
  • Decarboxylation
  • THC and CBD in the Body
  • A Plant of (More Than) 1,001 Chemicals
  • Messy Brains and Marijuana
  • Brain Science, Bliss, and the Endocannabinoid System
  • Genes, Genomes, and Cannabis
  • Putting the Cannabis Genome to Work
  • Modern Medicinal Cannabis
  • Legalize It?
  • Dangerous?
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A wide-ranging study of the evolution, chemistry, and allure of marijuana. "As a full-time evolutionary biologist, part-time botanist, recreational user, and more than likely a future medicinal user, I find cannabis one of the most fascinating of all plants on our planet," writes DeSalle, a curator of molecular systematics at the American Museum of Natural History. It's fascinating indeed: A flowering plant, cannabis is a distant cousin of the grape (thus pairing nicely with a glass of wine) but is more closely related to hops (thus also pairing nicely with a pint of ale). The divergence from the latter took place about 28 million years ago, meaning that cannabis was known to early animal forms, including our ancestral primates, who, by DeSalle's account, preferred the booze that they found in fallen fruit--thus becoming evolutionarily "preadapted" to getting high, a trait they passed along to their human kin. As the author notes, the earliest attested use of cannabis dates to about 12,000 years ago on the Tibetan Plateau, but soon after the plant spread all over Eurasia, so that "it is more than likely that any human group in those occupied areas was using cannabis in some way." The author writes with an occasional winking reference, as when he titles one section of a chapter "Light Up or Leave Me Alone," but in the main his text is rigorously scientific; it helps to have some background in botany and chemistry, as well as a tolerance for terms such as "xerostomia" and "cannabidiolic acid synthase." Read on, though, and DeSalle sneaks in some popular culture, venturing that the Coen brothers' filmThe Big Lebowski deserves the "highest" (wink, wink) rank of films about weed and recommending that the medical establishment take a more relaxed attitude toward cannabis and allow it into "our medical toolbox." Everything you ever wanted to know about pot. Just don't try to read it when you're baked. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.