I’ll admit upfront, I came to Famesick with almost no history with Lena Dunham. I never watched Girls. I didn’t follow her career closely. What I knew was secondhand: that she was a controversial figure, that her first book, Not That Kind of Girl, drew its own share of backlash, and that this new memoir would deal honestly with addiction. That last piece is what got me to pick it up. I finished it somewhere in between loving it and being frustrated by it, and that in between place is actually where I think the most honest review lives.
The sections dealing with rehab and addiction are the ones I came for, and they’re where the book is at its strangest and most affecting. Dunham writes that period with a floating quality, somewhere between fantasy and reality, like reading the diary entries of a woman who was intoxicated while she lived them and is only now making sense of what happened. She opens the rehab chapters with something close to a summer camp or freshman year feeling, the awkward first days of communal living among strangers, except many of those strangers were there for IV heroin use. That disorientation gives way, eventually, to real clarity. At one point she writes that she hadn’t arrived there because of some sudden disaster. She’d made choices. “I was the chaos.” It’s a small moment, but it’s the place in the book where she takes the clearest ownership of what happened to her.
Some context matters here. Much of Dunham’s addiction grew out of a long medical ordeal: debilitating endometriosis, multiple surgeries, and an eventual hysterectomy at thirty one to manage pain that had become unmanageable. The medication that was meant to treat that pain became its own problem, layered on top of the pressures of fame and a unraveling relationship. This isn’t a story about a young star who got reckless for the fun of it. It’s a story about pain treatment that tipped into dependency, which so many people in recovery will recognize.
Where the book loses me a little is in how unevenly that clarity holds. There are passages where Dunham draws a direct line between what happened and what it caused, and then there are passages, often the ones where she describes hurting people she loved, where that same connection just isn’t made. She’s also candid that she didn’t fully engage with treatment at first, and that she didn’t claim the label of drug addict for herself until the final weeks of the period she’s writing about. The moment that crystallized the book’s uneven relationship with its own subject matter for me was learning that she was given permission to leave treatment to attend the Met Gala, with her stylist and makeup artist in tow. It’s a minor detail in the book, but it says something larger about how fame can keep its grip even on the parts of a life meant to be about getting free of something.
So who is this book for? Not necessarily someone newly sober looking for a recovery memoir in the traditional sense. I’d point this one toward the curious reader, someone interested in recovery stories more broadly, who wants an unflinching, sometimes uneven, occasionally glamorous look at what happens when a body and a life both start to fall apart under pressure, and what it takes to start telling the truth about it.
#QUITLIT Sobees Score: 3 out of 5
SOBER POP CULTURE: Lena Dunham at 8 Years Sober – What Famesick Reveals About the Years She Couldn’t Remember
#QUITLIT: Sober Celebrity Memoirs Worth Reading – Books Written by People Who’ve Actually Been There
SOBER POP CULTURE + CELEBS at The Sober Curator is where mainstream trends meet the vibrant world of sobriety. We serve up a mix of movie, podcast, fashion, and book recommendations alongside alcohol-free cocktails, celebrity features, and pop culture buzz—all with a sober twist.
We’re here to shatter the “sobriety is boring” myth with a mash-up of 80s neon, 90s hip-hop edge, early 2000s bling, and today’s hottest trends. From celebrity shoutouts to red-carpet style inspo, this is where sober is as chic as it is fun. To the celebs using their platform for good—our Sober Pop Trucker hats are off to you!
All the cool kids go to rehab…
Resources Are Available
If you or someone you know is experiencing difficulties surrounding alcoholism, addiction, or mental illness, please reach out and ask for help. People everywhere can and want to help; you just have to know where to look. And continue to look until you find what works for you. Click here for a list of regional and national resources.
Follow The Sober Curator on X, the artist formerly known as Twitter
What is Famesick by Lena Dunham about?
Famesick is Lena Dunham’s memoir about fame, chronic illness, addiction, treatment, and the personal fallout that came with a body and life under pressure. Anne Marie Cribbin’s review focuses especially on the sections about rehab, addiction, and Dunham’s process of understanding her own role in the chaos around her.
Is Famesick a recovery memoir?
Not exactly. Anne Marie describes it as more of a recovery-adjacent memoir than a traditional recovery book. The addiction and rehab sections are central, but the book also moves through fame, illness, pain management, relationships, and self-examination.
How does Lena Dunham write about addiction in Famesick?
According to the review, Dunham’s addiction writing has a floating, disorienting quality, almost as if she is piecing together events from inside and outside the experience at the same time. The strongest moments come when she takes clearer ownership of her choices, including the line, “I was the chaos.”
Who should read Famesick?
This book may be best for readers who are curious about recovery stories, celebrity memoirs, chronic illness, and the complicated relationship between pain, medication, fame, and accountability. Anne Marie notes that it may not be the best fit for someone newly sober looking for a straightforward recovery memoir.
What Sobee Score did Anne Marie give Famesick?
Anne Marie gave Famesick a Sobee Score of 3 out of 5, calling it honest, uneven, affecting, and sometimes frustrating.