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  • Thai Stick: Surfers, Scammers, and the Untold Story of the Marijuana Trade by Peter Maguire and Mark Ritter
  • James Bradford
Peter Maguire and Mark Ritter. Thai Stick: Surfers, Scammers, and the Untold Story of the Marijuana Trade. New York: Columbia University Press, 2015. xxxiv + 272 pp. ISBN-13 978-0-231-16135-0, $19.95 (paper).

In the last several years, marijuana has had a "coming out" of sorts. Gone are the days of Reefer Madness or hippies and the counterculture movement; they are now replaced by professional weed entrepreneurs and 4/20 festivals. Marijuana is now integrated into the American economy and culture unlike ever before. But how did we get here? As Peter Maguire and Mark Ritter argue in their book Thai Stick: Surfers, Scammers, and the Untold Story of the Marijuana Trade, marijuana's [End Page 1020] normalization is due in large part to a global smuggling trade that helped fuel the growing demand for marijuana. Maguire and Ritter focus on the "voices of a voiceless group that was conspicuously absent" from marijuana historiography, that of the marijuana smuggler (xxxii). Thai Stick aims to show how this obscure, but essential, group of surfers, hippies, and entrepreneurs emerged as key agents of the global marijuana trade, which clearly influences America and the world today.

Thai Stick is ambitious, considering the difficulties of researching the illicit drug trade using traditional historical methods. As they note, "there are no smuggling archives and state records only document the victories of law enforcement" (xxxii). But to tell the history of marijuana smuggling, Thai Stick has to defy convention. It does so through its methodology. This book is primarily an oral history, but also part autobiography, resulting in a narrative that could be described as cultural or business history, or even anthropological or sociological analysis. This methodological approach stems primarily from the authors themselves. Maguire is a historian, but one who grew up surfing the California shores surrounded by the very smugglers being analyzed. Ritter, on the other hand, was a direct player in this game, and his recollections of people, places, and key events serves as the glue for much of this narrative. What they have created is an important, and much needed, account of the emergence, growth, and eventual downfall of a key aspect of the global marijuana trade.

Much of Thai Stick centers on the theme of how a ragtag group of surfers adapted to the changing legal and economic landscape of the illicit marijuana trade and helped turn marijuana into one of America's most influential industries. As Maguire and Ritter note, surfers were more than marginal figures in American society; they were ideal for navigating the contours of the illicit global marijuana trade. The authors state that "the transition into the black market was not a stretch for thrill seekers who had traditionally come from the margins of American society. Not only did surfing provide excellent cover, but in a few nervous days or hours, one could earn enough money to pay for years of surfing dreams" (p. 3).

The book evokes two eras in the smuggling of drugs. The first four chapters, in particular, focus on a more naïve period for Ritter and the others involved. In chapters 1 and 2, for example, Maguire and Ritter provide a broad historical picture of how the political and social chaos of the 1960s, spurred by the countercultural movement, lured surfers like Ritter beyond the waves of California. But by chapter 3, when Ritter smokes the Thai sticks, and "his Thai seduction was complete" (p. 52), the more entrepreneurial components of the book take shape. Unlike hashish from Afghanistan or Nepal, "if you had Thai sticks (reverently known as Buddha Sticks), you named the price—consumers happily paid 10 times more than anyone had [End Page 1021] ever paid for marijuana before" (p. 53). More important, the Thai marijuana trade offered no barriers of entry, as it was dictated by "the economic law of supply and demand," not by larger cartels and criminal organizations" (p. 54). If one had the will, the way was apparently quite easy.

As the book progresses, Maguire and Ritter demonstrate how a...

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