In this eye-opening memoir, Lisa Crystal Carver recalls her
extraordinary youth and charts the late-80s, early-90s punk subculture
that she helped shape. She recounts how her band Suckdog was born in
1987 and the wild events that followed: leaving small-town New Hampshire
to tour Europe at 18, becoming a teen publisher of fanzines, a teen
bride, and a teen prostitute. Spin has called Suckdog's album Drugs
Are Nice one of the best of the '90s, and the book includes photos of
infamous European shows. Yet the book also tells of how Lisa saw the
need for change in 1994, when her baby was born with a chromosomal
deletion and his father became violent. With lasting lightness and
surprising gravity, Drugs Are Nice is a definitive account of the
generation that wanted to break every rule, but also a story of an
artist and a mother becoming an adult on her own terms.