Seeds of Vice: On Poppy Tea is a bold work of historical and philosophical nonfiction about one of humanity’s oldest and most misunderstood plants. Beginning with poppy tea, the simplest and oldest expression of the poppy’s chemistry, it traces a forgotten relationship between pain, nature, medicine, and power.

This book examines the poppy honestly. Its biology, its chemistry, and its hard earned, long held place in human life. It follows the plant from household knowledge and traditional use into the age of modern chemistry, prohibition, and medical control, asking how something once common became so unfamiliar.

Neither apology nor condemnation, Seeds of Vice is a serious meditation on suffering, relief, responsibility, and the loss of ancestral knowledge. It is a book about the management of pain, the authority to govern it, and the price paid when ancient understandings are buried beneath law, stigma, and institutional power.

For readers interested in the history of medicine, forbidden knowledge, natural remedies, and the cultural meaning of the poppy, this is not a conventional drug book. It is a revisionist attempt to establish what was in the pursuit of what can be.