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A Killing in Cannabis
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03 February 2026

“An exhilarating, deeply reported true-crime murder mystery and love story that moves like a Netflix thriller.”—The New York Times Book Review
“A deeply reported literary nonfiction masterpiece.”—Wright Thompson
“An exhilarating, deeply reported true-crime murder mystery and love story that moves like a Netflix thriller.”—The New York Times Book Review
“True crime doesn’t come much better than this. . . . [Eden’s] ability to dig into how marijuana is grown one minute and generate top-shelf suspense the next sets the account apart.”—Publishers Weekly (starred review)
“[An] exceptional piece of journalism. . . . An unsettling portrait of [an] opaque, quasi-legal, unremittingly perilous world.”—Booklist (starred review)
“A Killing in Cannabis is three books in one. First, it’s a murder mystery that would work even if every word was made up. Next, it’s a deeply reported literary nonfiction masterpiece, as if Robert Caro reported a story written by Colum McCann. It’s a book that inhabits the subculture of illegal and legal weed, of the last tracer afterglow of whatever good was happening in San Francisco in the 1960s, before it turned sour, connecting Neal Cassady to El Chapo, and the Acid Tests to violence, venture capitalism, and greed. Which brings me to the third book: Scott Eden has written a parable — the best book about the moral and ethical soul of Silicon Valley — about how the American dream of ‘Go West, young man’ has delivered us to this moment of postmodern nihilism called America in 2026. The years do, as the song says, melt. But not into a dream. Into a nightmare. This book—these books—are the chronicle of that long slide into darkness.”—Wright Thompson, New York Times bestselling author of The Barn: The Secret History of a Murder in Mississippi
“A grimly fascinating true-crime yarn centered on California’s legal—and otherwise—weed business. . . . A complex story well told, and a cautionary tale for would-be drug kingpins.”—Kirkus