- Published: 5 August 2025
- ISBN: 9781802063769
- Imprint: Penguin Press
- Format: Paperback
- Pages: 400
- RRP: $24.99
The Captive Imagination
Addiction, Reality and our Search for Meaning

















- Published: 5 August 2025
- ISBN: 9781802063769
- Imprint: Penguin Press
- Format: Paperback
- Pages: 400
- RRP: $24.99
In rich and arresting prose, and with radical originality, Dakwar expands initial, pragmatic insights about addiction into a far-reaching examination of authenticity, exploring how we define a happy life, a good life, a valid life
Andrew Solomon, author of THE NOONDAY DEMON
A riveting, compassionate meditation that navigates philosophy, psychedelics, religion, biomedicine, neuroscience, critical theory, and contemporary culture with brilliant and understated insight, shedding new light on the role of fiction in addiction as well as in our existence more fundamentally. Incredibly erudite and informed, this book forces us to reconsider the nature of desire and of our capacity to undermine our own fulfillment – while also offering a means of restoration
Patricia Dailey, author of PROMISED BODIES
This book is a much-needed stabilizing force in the fraught public discourse on addiction, which relies heavily on tropes that dehumanize. Dakwar, an admirably unique psychiatrist who is before all else human, places the suffering of those afflicted with addiction in the larger context of human suffering. For that reason alone, this book is a must read
Carl Hart, author of DRUG USE FOR GROWNUPS
This seductively written, likely landmark book about addiction and its treatments asks important and haunting questions about what Coleridge (addicted to opium yet never in doubt of his creative freedom) called "the shaping spirit" of a strong imagination. Is even great art a condition of our endemic hunger for self-delusion? How to shape the world into our truest likeness? Dakwar offers brilliant insight, with a scientist’s originality, a physician’s profound experience
Joseph McElroy, author of WOMEN AND MEN
If depression was the word for a previous generation, addiction is certainly ours to inherit. The Captive Imagination shows us the depth of our addictive passions for so much more than substances—for comfort, for narratives, and for a feeling of control. In a world that is more and more impoverished on the level of imagination, we can only but grow more and more addictive in our search for stability, even when that can only be the most predictable delights and pains. Elias Dakwar shows us how to unearth and let breathe this fundamentally human will-to-be
Jamieson Webster, Psychoanalyst and Writer
A psychiatrist’s fascinating quest to understand drugs and addiction – and to describe the indescribable... I was drawn to Dakwar’s vivid stories of patients and their different histories of drug use... The Captive Imagination is rich in words… [Dakwar] writes lucidly of brain-based models of addiction, while making it clear that they cannot fully explain people’s experiences
Guardian