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  1. Sep 30, 2021 · With the events compressed into an account of Lizzie’s first year at Harvard, Skjoldbjærg’s Prozac Nation (Citation 2001), like Wurtzel’s memoir, retains a keen eye for lifestyle and a preoccupation with certain kinds of popular culture. In one pivotal episode from early in the film, for example, we see Lizzie at a Lou Reed gig, a scene that spills into a fantasy in which she enjoys a ...

  2. Elizabeth Lee Wurtzel (July 31, 1967 – January 7, 2020) was an American writer, journalist, and lawyer known for the confessional memoir Prozac Nation, which she published at the age of 27.

  3. Jan 8, 2020 · Wurtzel was soon doing cocaine and heroin, and found herself addicted to Ritalin, which she did not “take” so much as snort, as she recounted in her 2003 addiction memoir, “More, Now, Again.”

  4. Jan 8, 2020 · Her second book, Bitch: In Praise of Difficult Women, a 1998 collection of essays exploring some of history’s most complicated women, and depicting a topless Wurtzel giving the world the finger ...

  5. Jan 17, 2020 · Elizabeth Wurtzel entered American letters in a white hot blaze in 1994. Her subject matter: what Winston Churchill called the black dog — depression.

  6. Dec 26, 2020 · On the afternoon I spent with Elizabeth Wurtzel, she was warm but ferociously intimidating. It was 1994, months before the release of Prozac Nation, the book that made her famous at age 27; I was ...

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  8. Jan 10, 2020 · Four years later, Wurtzel published one of the best things she ever wrote, an essay for New York magazine about what she termed her “one-night stand of a life.” “I am proud that I have never ...

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