"A lucid and revealing book...an unusually amusing, moving, and spirited account." --Adam Phillips, The Nation
"In a medicalized world of specious concepts where false hope has taken the form of a diagnosis and a pill, the only way to challenge current thinking is with a sledgehammer, or a copy of Manufacturing Depression. And best of all, this may be the funniest book on depression ever." --Errol Morris, Academy Award-winning director of The Fog of War
"Greenberg['s] bouts of deep depressions [are] smartly conveyed here, including [his] participation in a clinical trial for an antidepressant...the author engages in extended, illuminating discussions of a host of therapeutic techniques, the confounding power of the placebo effect, the evolution of psychopharmacology and the ways in which expectations shape response. A humanistic, witty exploration of the human response to depression." --Kirkus
"Greenberg elegantly dissects the medical-research-pharmaceutical complex....A splendid, witty analysis of how we came to give up the stories of our lives in favor of analyzing the alphabet of which the stories are made. An essential read for all invested in medicine and social science." --Library Journal, starred review
"[Greenberg] is an unusually eloquent writer, and his book offers a grand tour of the history of modern medicine, as well as an up-close look at contemporary practices." --Louis Menand, The New Yorker
"A dizzying, dazzling critique. It is probably the most thoughtful book on depression ever written." --Jonathan Rottenberg, Ph.D., Psychology Today
"Manufacturing Depression is full of fascinating stories...Greenberg's greatest contribution, though, is insisting on few certainties, and in offering himself to us." --Liz Else, New Scientist