Citations:Drunksville

Noun: "(slang) a notional town representing the state of being intoxicated"

 * 1967, Charles Nuetzel, Hollywood Nymph, Wildside Press (2007), ISBN 9780809501373, page 46:
 * "Hell we are!" She laughed, almost happily. "Where to?"
 * "A bar—a hotel room—a bed. Drunksville—and Sexville."
 * 2000, Neal J., Alcoholics Alive!, Writers Club Press (2000), ISBN 0595140483, page 339:
 * I ate antacids like candy for my upset stomach, I took aspirin (for anything else) for various aches and pains all over my body and of course, I gulped a few thousand Valium® and Librium® to calm my tormented nerves. Military service is a nervous place to be. So is drunksville.
 * 2007, Andrea Portes, Hick, Unbridled Books (2007), ISBN 9781936071197, page 35:
 * This is cause you yourself would not be thinking about watching blushing and backrooms and groping of your for-sale mama while your dad is somewhere two sheets to drunksville.
 * 2008, Ben Thompson, Alarms, Madison (2008),, page 154:
 * Max was in the express lane to Drunksville, there was no doubt about it, not anymore.
 * 2010, Lew Bryson, Pennsylvania Breweries, Stackpole Books (2010), ISBN 9780811736411, page 298:
 * Get something to eat: Drinking big beers on an empty gut is a fast ticket to Drunksville—and the food at beer fests is usually pretty good.
 * 2011, Thomas Dowling, The Serengeti Plane: Book One: Take Off, AuthorHouse (2011), ISBN 9781463402914, page 61:
 * In either case, they were on their merry way to Drunksville.
 * 2011, Emerald T. Stone, Crossing the Line, Strategic Book Group (2011), ISBN 9781618971401, page 12:
 * (By this time I was on my way to drunksville and I liked it!).