an Author and journalist Elizabeth Wurtzel was on Tuesday at the age of 52 and died from the effects of metastatic breast cancer, confirms that her husband is in the interview with CNN.
The U.s. Wurtzel became famous worldwide through her book, Prozac Nation, in 1994, at the age of 27, it was, and that she is candid about her manic depression and her experiences with drugs, alcohol, and antidepressants writers. In her bold and uncompromising confession was a thrill, but it became too much of a criticism.
Wurtzel wrote more books, including the Bitch: In Praise of Difficult Women (1998), and, More, Now, Again ” (2001), in which she talks about her addiction to ritalin. She also wrote articles and essays for various journals, magazines and newspapers, including New York Magazine and The Guardian.
After the diagnosis of breast cancer was carried out Wurtzel’s campaign to be tested for genetic predisposition to breast and ovarian cancer. Wurtzel had a genetic mutation.
“Cancer is fit for me,” she said, in 2018, in an essay of that title. “I can have a good fight. And the battle lasts for the rest of my life. However, I was always going to be by myself in this battle. I’ve become accustomed to it. I have no time to remember that my body and mind did not set out to do something to get a hold of. I feel at ease in the discomfort.”