Famesick is a pleasure to consume, its sentences seductive, its rhythms soothing. It leads to a fast read, but the sentences never feel empty. It is the pleasure of reading someone who also actually reads books, not someone who only reads posts or captions, which, in our newly crowned post-literate cultural landscape, feels like a blessing. Harper s Bazaar
Although most young women are not also writing and directing a series that makes them a household name, Dunham finds a way to hang her experiences on a scaffolding of normal feeling, describing the kinds of nausea and social panic one can experience even without an HBO deal. New York Magazine
Delicious . . . In Famesick, Dunham places PTSD, loss, trauma, fuck-up and body horror at the centre of the story, and describes herself variously as oversensitive, people-pleasing and always lying in bed. And yet, reading and talking to her, one is keenly aware that, alongside this version of Dunham, is the other one: the absolute powerhouse of a woman, steely eyed, tunnel visioned, who pushed through punishing volumes of work at the highest of levels, year after year after year. The Guardian
[Famesick] has a whiff of the old Hollywood tell-all, indie edition, with trash bags for curtains in an Eagle Rock group house. The New York Times
Famesick doesn t have heroes or villains, just several people trying their best and still failing . . . [Dunham] has learned to give us less of herself, to keep the pieces for her own use instead of our projection. Slate
As someone who has read a truly absurd amount of celebrity memoirs, I can tell you that in rare fashion Dunham goes deep. The New York Times Magazine
A raw and vulnerable look at the intersection of public notoriety and chronic illness. Parade
Dunham contends with her ambition, relationships, and chronic physical and mental illnesses in the way only she can: with ruthless self-deprecation and a healthy dose of humor. W Magazine
Famesick promises to be the kind of book we expect from Dunham: familiar yet surprising, funny yet bittersweet, vulnerable yet brave. For me at least, Dunham has always been the kind of girl who makes me sit up and pay attention, no matter what it is she wants to say. Literary Hub