Reediana

Coming of Age on Zoloft (Harper Perennial, 2012)

By Katherine Sharpe ’01

Reviewed by Mary Emily O’Hara ’12
Coming of Age on Zoloft

Young adulthood has never been easy, but today’s college students report an alarming incidence of mental illness—particularly depression. Roughly 11% of all college students are currently being treated for depression, according to the American College Health Association, and Katherine Sharpe ’01 was one of them. Her new book, Coming of Age on Zoloft, tracks the explosion of antidepressants using her own medicated adolescence at Reed as an axis. Applying historical research, memoir, and interviews with over 40 medicated people, she ultimately questions our drive to “ask your doctor whether Wellbutrin may be right for you.”

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The book has already generated controversy: the Atlantic ran a review in June, “Hey, Let’s Not Get Carried Away.” Using terms like “cosmetic psychopharmacology,” the book draws a complex picture of antidepressant use as a huge social experiment. There’s real tension between our limited understanding of how antidepressants really work, and the desperate need of millions of people to find a way to function normally without the weight of exhausting malaise. In the meantime, as 10% of the U.S. population dutifully pops “head meds” in the morning, we can’t help but ask:What does it really mean to be happy? And how far are we willing to go to get there?