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Not just of her success, which was not just down to her looks and attitude but fully deserved as a skilled, highly engaging writer; but also, and perhaps more tellingly, for her ability to not give a fig for what anyone thought of her.







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Khazanah told Reuters last week it was supportive of Malaysia Airlines' restructuring efforts but that if they proved unsuccessful, it would need to evaluate options on how to maintain connectivity for Malaysia.



Not just the glamorisation of a culture of hopelessness — as one reviewer at the time put it, 'subtitled Young And Depressed In America, Prozac Nation became part of the grunge zeitgeist and made the one-time New Yorker rock critic a star', but also a marked increase in the use of antidepressants. Of course, there were unintended consequences.



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"When I was walking the streets there were people who were chatting to our vendors at a safe distance, only taking a couple of minutes and buying the magazine, but also saying, 'hey, how are you doing, are you OK?'" he said.



Her father — Donald Wurtzel — wasn't really her father, a fact she found out only much later in life: in 2018, after she had spent years trying to recover from the trauma of him severing all contact with her when she was a teenager.



When Elizabeth Wurtzel, who died from breast cancer this week aged 52 — my age, as it happens, which is slightly sobering — first published her book Prozac Nation to great fanfare, I remember feeling distinctly irritated by the whole thing.



SINGAPORE, Oct 7 (Reuters) - The parent of Malaysia Airlines has warned leasing companies that state fund Khazanah will stop funding the group and force it into a winding down process if restructuring talks with lessors are unsuccessful, according to a letter seen by Reuters.



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And yet, as Wurtzel put it with characteristic eloquence some years after Prozac Nation was published, many long-term users feel like 'toddlers stuck in front of Teletubbies by a nanny who didn't care for them, rather than being hugged by a parent who did'.



The warning from Malaysia Aviation Group (MAG), the holding company for the carrier, raises the stakes in negotiations for a financial shake-up known as "Plan A" and sets out an alternative plan to divert funds to a sister airline unit called Firefly.



"In the event Plan A fails, shareholder (Khazanah) will cease funding for MAG and will trigger winding down/liquidation process for MAG," according to the document, the contents of which were confirmed by six people familiar with the matter.



Because, make no mistake, until Wurtzel came along most people thought of mental illness as something that manifested itself in criminal or highly erratic behaviour, that had a distinctly Bedlam-like flavour to it — in other words mad, not sad.



But then by all accounts she was always rather too cool for school, the product of a highly dysfunctional family.

Her parents split up when she was two, and she grew up in Manhattan surrounded by her mother's literary friends.



To an extent, the book's success made that wish come true. But having had my own struggles with the black dog from a similarly young age, that was the thing that really got to me about Prozac Nation: the way it — and the author — made being deeply unhappy look cool — and pill-popping (not to mention other types of drug-taking) even more so.



It was the early Nineties and Wurtzel — sexy, blonde, beautiful, dangerous — was the kind of girl newspaper editors (in those days invariably male) couldn't get enough of; and London was full of them.



Wurtzel was the poster girl for the 'hot mess' brand of young female, and for someone like me, for whom being sexy and screwed up was neither desirable nor a viable short-cut to success, it was infuriating to see her so lionised.



Antidepressants, as Wurtzel herself understood, were meant to treat only the acute phase of depression, to stabilise the patient's brain chemistry to the point where long-term therapy and lifestyle changes could begin to bear fruit.



When the book came out in UK, in 1995, Prozac was used by about a quarter of a million people in Britain; most recent statistics show that in 2018, 70.9 million prescriptions for antidepressants were given out in England alone.