From bank robber to scholar: the Knoxville dropout fighting to change how we see addiction

从银行劫匪到学者:这位诺克斯维尔辍学生正努力改变我们看待毒品成瘾的方式

The Audio Long Read

2025-10-03

31 分钟
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Kirsten Smith was 19 when she first tried heroin; within a few years she was in prison. She says she willingly made bad choices and wants society to stop treating addiction as a disease By Xi Chen. Read by Katherine Fenton. Help support our independent journalism at theguardian.com/longreadpod
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  • This is The Guardian.

  • Welcome to The Guardian Long Read,

  • showcasing the best long-form journalism covering culture, politics and new thinking.

  • For the text version of this and all our long reads, go to TheGuardian.com forward slash long read.

  • From bank robber to scholar.

  • The Knoxville Dropout Fighting to Change How We See Addiction by Xi Chen, read by Catherine Fenton.

  • Kirsten Smith was 16 when a boy from school injected her with morphine,

  • 18 when she in a date Googled had a crush up and inject themselves with oxycodone,

  • and 19 when she first shot up heroin.

  • Living in Knoxville, Tennessee, and modeling herself on pulp fiction's free-wheeling Mia Wallace,

  • Smith spent her days experimenting with alcohol, cannabis,

  • ecstasy, mushrooms, LSD, and benzodiazepines.

  • She read Kurt Vonnegut and The Beats and wrote poems on an actual typewriter

  • while listening to the Velvet Underground.

  • For Smith, As for thousands of Americans who came of age in the early 2000s,

  • drug use was a seemingly harmless lifestyle choice.

  • That is, until she ran out of money.

  • After Smith dropped out of high school and started regularly using heroin,

  • she was caught stealing credit cards and checkbooks from a boyfriend's wealthy parents,

  • from a family friend at church, and from her grandmother.