There are two answers –
in salt form and fat soluble, depending on which way you look at it. According
to Penn Foster's "How Drugs Work”, "No matter what form of the drug
is swallowed, the drug must go into the free solution in the stomach or small
intestine to pass from the GI tract into circulation. One factor that allows
many drugs to go into free solution in the GI tract is that the drug is in a
salt form within the commercial preparation. Salts of drugs dissolve readily in
stomach liquid."
Also quoted from "How Drugs Work", "The portal
blood supply is joined to the small intestine by capillaries connecting to the
gastrointestinal mucosal cells. In some cases, it isn’t easy to get through
these mucosal cells because there’s a selective process that attempts to allow
only important substances through. In the case of drugs, it has been found that
the fat-soluble molecules (lipid-soluble drugs) are absorbed through these mucosal cells very well."