Here is the thought-provoking description of the authors spiritual quest, his profound discoveries, and their implications for renewed research with psychedelic substances, reawakening us to the sacredness of nature and life itself. In and through the pitfalls and pinnacles of his journey is the transformation of a curious and courageous young man into a mature modern prophet and social critic. Fascinating read! * William A. Richards, Ph.D., Johns Hopkins School of Medicine * Simons book discusses all these highly charged ideas in a charming, easily understood, humorous, and utterly engaging manner that will resonate with experienced psilocybin explorers and that may just open the eyes of those who are not (yet) experienced to the possibility that nature is richly blessed with unimagined realms of intelligence, mystery, and complexity. With this book, his third, Simon has knocked it right out of the park (or perhaps right into the park, since parks seem to be the frequent home of his little fungal friends). * Dennis McKenna, Ph.D., ethnopharmacologist, cofounder of the Heffter Research Institute, and author * Simon G. Powell, a credible psychonaut, has written a book that should be welcomed as our overpopulated species attempts to transition to sane drug policies and respect for native wisdom, integration with nature, and, ultimately, planetary maturity and ecological stability. * Dorion Sagan, American science writer, essayist, and theorist * The author informs, muses, and amuses as he chronicles his psilocybin explorations and insights into natural intelligence. He writes in joyfully plain English, tells compelling stories, and gets excited by all of life. Definitely outside the box. * Jeremy Narby, author of The Cosmic Serpent * Simon G. Powells most profound insight is that nature is intelligent, not in the way that we think of intelligence as confined to the human mind, but that intelligence is an intrinsic property of the whole of nature. He calls for a new science of psilocybinetics that views life anew under the perceptual lens afforded by the mushroom. It is an interesting and provocative read! * David E. Nichols, Ph. D., president and cofounder of the Heffter Research Institute *