Excellent . . . stresses the dynamics of sex roles and social class that underlie the culture of psychotropic drug use. He grounds the success of tranquilizers in the consumer culture that emerged after World War II, emphasizing the shrewd marketing techniques that allowed drug companies to separate their products, which appealed to a largely white, middle-class constituency, from the illegal drugs that were used by marginalized racial, ethnic, and class groups. Drug companies also promoted the tranquilizers in ways that reinforced traditional sex roles, implying that their products would allow men to strengthen their authority at home and in the office and would allow women to embrace their duties as wives and mothers.
--Allan V. Horwitz, Ph.D., New England Journal of Medicine
The book admirably achieves its main aim: describing the reception of tranquilizers in the popular imagination of postwar America. It also draws attention to the important issue of happiness as an increasingly medicalized commodity in that context.
--Nicolas Rasmussen, Bulletin of the History of Medicine
A brilliant book, rich and mind-bending . . . Unlike most others on the subject, Happy Pills seeks not to condemn or celebrate but to understand. I find it hard not to praise it too much, not to become a marketing tool urging its wider distribution and intellectual consumption.
--Helen Lefkowitz Horowitz, Business History Review
Herzberg eloquently guides us through the world of happy pills in post-World War II America . . . Happy Pills is an engaging, insightful, and well-researched book that makes a strong contribution to the historical and social study of science.
--Lorna Ronald, Journal of American History
Herzberg is a a social historian and meticulous auditor of the progress of psychotropic medication in the USA . . . On the one hand these drugs offer escape from the stresses and strains of socio-economic relations; on the other hand they are a direct product of those relations.
--David Pilgrim, Sociology of Health and Illness
Truly a dizzying array of data on the history of the science, commerce, marketing, medicine, psychiatry and psychology, all aspects of the history of the pills, is a major achievement . . . Herzberg's book, exemplifying history of medicine as a thoroughly interdisciplinary field, is important and timely.
--Susan K. Rishworth, Pharmacy in History
An incisive cultural history that documents the transformation of these medications into 'happy pills' for the middle class.
--Peter Conrad, Contexts
Written with verve, it offers myriad ways to understand the complexity and range of its subject. Not only does it illuminate American drug cultures; it also demonstrates the rich interplay of invention, marketing, advertising, expertise, regulation, medical practice, and consumption.
--Helen Lefkowitz Horowitz, Business History Review
An excellent starting point from which to explore many changes in post-war American psychiatry, changes that have affected the way in which we conceptualize, analyse and treat mental illness.
--Matthew Smith, History of Psychiatry
[An] intriguing book.
--David Pilgrim, Sociology of Health and Illness
By placing human action at the heart of this culturally rich history, Herzberg has written a masterful account of the travels of 'happy pills' from Madison Avenue to your medicine cabinet.
--Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences
Do read this book. It will make you even more thoughtful about your next prescription for antidepressants.
--British Medical Journal
Herzberg does an excellent job of expounding on the interplay of social, cultural, and commercial forces that influenced the rise and fall of these blockbuster drugs.
--Journal of Clinical Investigation
Herzberg deftly explains the dispensing of 'happy pills' within the prism of Cold War class consciousness while the US fought a discordant contemporaneous 'war on drugs.'
--Choice
[Avoids] heated debates between advocates of psychotropic medication such as Peter Kramer and vocal critics such as Peter Breggin and David Healy. Instead, Herzberg shows us how the meanings attached to such drugs evolved from a complex interplay of shifting interests, including those of marketers, patients and doctors. Although the story is a complicated one, it is highly readable and Herzberg tells it using plain, non-technical language.
--Metapsychology
Welcome and informative . . . a kind of protest against the tendency to assume that the issues surrounding psychiatric drug use can be reduced to scientific or technological factors.
--American Historical Review
This well-crafted book combines historical perspectives with the enduring issues of consumerism, patients' rights, ethical principles, and the role of pharmaceutical companies in marketing medicines.
--Technology and Culture
Highlights important implications of the cultural embrace of lifestyle drugs for dealing with everyday problems of living.
--BioSocieties
A timely book, persuasive and well documented.
--Psychiatric Services
This extremely well-written and well-researched book demands, and deserves, a wide audience.
--Medical History
Happy Pills provides readers, especially college-level students, with an excellent historical introduction to the subject of mood-altering prescription drugs as used in the United States in the post-World War II era. Herzberg's clear and readable prose masks in part the depth of his understanding and analysis of the topic. In addition to its classroom potential, this is a serious book with valuable insights for scholars in the field.
--Journal of the History of Medicine