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Home Baked

My Mom, Marijuana, and the Stoning of San Francisco

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Winner of the California Bookseller Association's Golden Poppy Award for Nonfiction
Finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award for Autobiography
A San Francisco Chronicle Bestseller
“A portrait of a heroics, innovation, grit, and pot-baking . . . strikingly relevant . . . beautifully written.”

Entertainment Weekly
"A raunchy and rollicking account of a vanished era told by someone who paid very close attention to her larger-than-life parents. I gobbled it up like an edible."

—Armistead Maupin
In the 1970s, when cannabis was as illicit as heroin, Alia Volz’s mother ran Sticky Fingers Brownies, a pioneering underground bakery that delivered ten thousand marijuana edibles per month to a city in the throes of change—from the joyous upheavals of gay liberation to the tragedy of the Peoples Temple. Dressed in elaborate costumes, Alia’s parents hid in plain sight, parading through the city’s circus-like atmosphere with the goods tucked into her stroller. When HIV/AIDS swept San Francisco in the 1980s, Alia’s mom turned from dealer into healer, providing soothing edibles to those fighting for their lives at the dawn of medical marijuana.
By turns heartbreaking, exhilarating, and laugh-out-loud funny, Home Baked celebrates an eccentric and remarkable extended family, taking us through love, loss, and finding home.
Now with extra material, including a reading group guide, author Q&A, and additional photos!
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    • Kirkus

      February 1, 2020
      The unheralded story of San Francisco's trailblazing "Brownie Lady" plays out across more than 20 tumultuous years of the city's often tragic history. Volz's mother, Meridy, and father, Doug, may have been complicated people, attempting to build a family during chaotic times in the Bay Area, but they were especially well suited to create and dispense delicious baked goodies heavily laced with palliative marijuana. By simple virtue of her birth, the author became an "accomplice" in Sticky Fingers Brownies, the family business that at one time was cranking out more than 10,000 brownies per month. The experience of accompanying Meridy on perilous brownie runs throughout the city in the 1970s and '80s, when growing a single marijuana plant was a felony offense in California, made Volz an eyewitness to an unprecedented revolution in American culture that continues to reverberate today. The author combines a journalist's eye for detail with a storyteller's sense of humanity to chronicle all the incredible highs and lows, both public and private. The dissolution of her parents' relationship dovetails with San Francisco's more public trauma, including the Jonestown Massacre, the assassination of Harvey Milk, and the outbreak of AIDS. "Faced with bureaucratic rigidity, people with AIDS broke the law to self-medicate with cannabis," writes Volz. "Dealers became healers." Sticky Fingers may have started off as a goofy piece of psychedelia wrapped up in tight, little squares, but the business soon became indispensable in providing necessary relief for stricken young men who were inexplicably wasting away from a little-understood disease while still only in their 20s and 30s. The author's firsthand depiction of AIDS and its devastating initial impact on San Francisco's residents rings with epic tragedy. Thankfully, there are plenty of triumphs in the Sticky Fingers saga as well, and Volz herself embodies just one of them. A sometimes-sad yet stirring love letter to San Francisco filled with profundity and pride.

      COPYRIGHT(2020) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      March 1, 2020
      Volz had been a part of her mother's special marijuana-brownie business for as long as she could remember. Indeed, she was taken along on delivery runs in her stroller. Volz's mother, Mer, had pioneered the illegal Sticky Fingers bakery in San Francisco in the 1970s, selling hundreds of the beloved brownies at Fisherman's Wharf and bringing them around to office workers, members of Harvey Milk's crowd, and even, by request, at least one cop willing to look the other way. After starting up her illicit business, which she ran with significant input from the wisdom of the I Ching, Mer met Volz's father, an artist tormented by his desire for other men. From the turbulent '70s through the ravages of the AIDS crisis (during which Mer and Alia distributed marijuana to AIDS patients), Volz recounts her mother's exploits with admiration, along the way tracing how attitudes about cannabis have shifted toward more acceptance.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2020, American Library Association.)

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