andquot;The criminal class is a more exact cross-section of humanity than any trade could be.andquot; andamp;ndash;Luc Sante, interview by Theandamp;#160;Believer andamp;#160; Weed, coke, heroin, molly, promethazine, crack, PCP, LCD, opium, hashish, mushrooms, and countless other illicit substances flood the streets of New York City where they are consumed as quickly as they can be delivered. The War on Drugs may have been declared in 1971, but the numbers are in and the governmentandamp;rsquo;s $1.5 trillion war has done little to nothing to kink the flow of drugs in America. In New York City the NYPD has even instated a Stop and Frisk policy that, since its 2002 inception, has resulted in millions of New Yorkers being unconstitutionally stopped and searched. This controversial policy has heightened the danger for the cityandamp;rsquo;s intrepid drug dealers, who brave all weather and police-profiling to meet their customersand#39; insatiable desires. Add on the constant threat of violence and robbery, and it is arguably the most high-risk yet lucrative time to be a NYC dealer. Demand never ceases to grow, and where there is demand, there will always be plenty of outlaw capitalists willing to step up and supply. Forandamp;#160;Dealers,andamp;#160;street reporter Peter Madsen set out across New York Cityandamp;mdash;from staid Gramercy residences to bleak homeless hangouts; grimy Bushwick bike messenger bars and tony Park Avenue penthousesandamp;mdash;to interview this particular criminal class. Throughandamp;#160;anonymousandamp;#160;one-on-one interviews with an alarmingly wide host of subjects (including a transient heroin-addict supporting his habit, cute art-school girls running a weed lounge, a connection-ready concierge, fixed-gear weed couriers, stick-up kids, and a couple lawyers who deal on the side), Madsen extracts un-glamorized, sometimes hilarious, and always nuanced accounts of the navigators of New York Cityand#39;s expansive drug underworld.