Elizabeth Wurtzel, whose startling 1994 memoir, “Prozac Nation: Young and Depressed in America,” won praise for opening a dialogue about clinical depression and helped introduce an unsparing style of ...
The place — a hot, sweaty, cramped reading room on the fifth floor of Barnes ‘ Noble, filled with pierced faces and blue hair and angry, angry women. The time — well, she’s already running late. A ...
Elizabeth Wurtzel, the author whose 1994 memoir "Prozac Nation" ignited conversations about the then-taboo topic of clinical depression, has died. She was 52.
Feminist icon Elizabeth Wurtzel's recent reflections on the previous year in New York magazine stirred up a hornet's next of responses, but I want to focus on one which echoes a recent theme explored ...
Elizabeth Wurtzel, the author whose 1994 memoir "Prozac Nation" ignited conversations about the then-taboo topic of clinical depression, has died. She was 52. Wurtzel passed away Tuesday in New York ...
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