The authors of this very recently published book on the medicalization of everyday life include the British child psychiatrist in the tradition of R.D. Laing, Sami Timimi. He writes, in Chapter 7 of the present volume, of the serious situation in which boys find themselves as they have been defined by mainstream psychiatry as defective children. Boys' enthusiasm has been demonized and their liveliness compromised by the forced administration of toxins (certain forms of amphetamines, for example, known in the States under the brand name Ritalin), often as a requirement for the boy to be able to return to school. Parents are usually not aware of what their children are being prescribed and feel guilty that their sons have been banished from school. School officials merely comply with the authority of the medical profession. Timimi's early work was reviewed in THYMOS: JOURNAL OF BOYHOOD STUDIES. What he has written is especially important on two counts: his clear understanding of the precarious situation of boys at the hands of mainstream psychiatry and psychopharmacology, and his debt to the work of R.D. Laing.