Synopses & Reviews
She devoured their memoirs and magazine articles, committing the most salacious details of their cautionary tales to memory--how little they ate, their lowest weights, and their merciless exercise regimes--to learn what it would take to be the very best anorectic. When she was hospitalized for anorexia at fifteen, she found herself in an existential wormhole: how can one suffer from something one has actively sought out? Through her own decade-long battle with anorexia, which included three lengthy hospitalizations, Osgood harrowingly describes the haunting and competitive world of inpatient facilities populated with other adolescents, some as young as ten years old. With attuned storytelling and unflinching introspection, Kelsey Osgood unpacks the modern myths of anorexia, examining the cult-like underbelly of eating disorders in the young, as she chronicles her own rehabilitation. is a brave, candid and emotionally wrenching memoir that explores the physical, internal, and social ramifications of eating disorders and subverts many of the popularly held notions of the illness and, most hopefully, the path to recovery.
Review
"What sets Kelsey Osgoods memoir apart from the existing literature on anorexia is the authors commitment to stripping the glamour and romance from the illness. Yes, Osgood suffered from anorexia, but she refuses here to play the game of ‘eating-disorders porn, focusing instead on how we must learn better ways to discuss anorexia in order to ‘undermine its currency, to save ourselves and our loved ones from the nightmare that it is. Intelligent, moving, beautifully written, Osgood has written a paean to wellness, and taken a forthright look at everything that anorexia, ‘bastard child of vanity and self-loathing, took from her life."--Molly McCloskey, author of
Circles Around the SunReview
"Why do countless young women (and not so young women, and some men, too) starve themselves to the brink of death? Do not read Kelsey Osgood's uncompromising memoir of her own anorexia unless you really want to know the truth—unvarnished by moral, therapeutic, or redemptive pieties—about this epidemic.
How to Disappear Completely gives new meaning to gutsiness."—Judith Thurman, Staff Writer at
The New Yorker, and prize-winning author of
Isak Dinesen: The Life of a Storyteller and
Secrets of the Flesh: A Life of ColetteReview
"All addictions are alike, but not anorexia. The looking glass malady covertly twists even the language of healing to its own ends. In this brilliant book, Kelsey Osgood breaks this demon's code." --Susannah Lessard, former
New Yorker staff writer and author of
The Architect of Desire: Beauty and Danger in the Stanford White Family
"Her gripping story and smart analysis lay anorexia bare for what it is--greedy, cunning, and wasteful, its logic tedious, its damage too often permanent. This is important reading for parents of teenagers, and friends and loved ones of anorectics, and an education for anyone who's felt the troubling allure of the waif archetype." --Katherine Sharpe, author of Coming of Age on Zoloft
"What sets Kelsey Osgoods memoir apart from the existing literature on anorexia is the authors commitment to stripping the glamour and romance from the illness. Yes, Osgood suffered from anorexia, but she refuses here to play the game of ‘eating-disorders porn, focusing instead on how we must learn better ways to discuss anorexia in order to ‘undermine its currency, to save ourselves and our loved ones from the nightmare that it is. Intelligent, moving, beautifully written, Osgood has written a paean to wellness, and taken a forthright look at everything that anorexia, ‘bastard child of vanity and self-loathing, took from her life."--Molly McCloskey, author of Circles Around the Sun
"Why do countless young women (and not so young women, and some men, too) starve themselves to the brink of death? Do not read Kelsey Osgood's uncompromising memoir of her own anorexia unless you really want to know the truth—unvarnished by moral, therapeutic, or redemptive pieties—about this epidemic. How to Disappear Completely gives new meaning to gutsiness."—Judith Thurman, Staff Writer at The New Yorker, and prize-winning author of Isak Dinesen: The Life of a Storyteller and Secrets of the Flesh: A Life of Colette
Synopsis
At fourteen, Kelsey Osgood became fascinated by the stories of women who starved themselves.
About the Author
Kelsey Osgood received an MFA in Creative Nonfiction from Goucher College. Her essays have appeared in the NewYorker.com,
New York Magazine,
Self, and
Tablet, among others.
How to Disappear Completely is her first book. She lives in Brooklyn, New York.