English citations of Prozac

  • 1994, Elizabeth Wurtzel, Prozac Nation: Young and Depressed in America, Houghton Mifflin, →ISBN, page 16:
    What I mean is this: Prozac has rather minimal side effects, the lithium has a few more, but basically the pair keep me functioning as a sane human being, at least most of the time.
  • 1994, “The Curse of Millhaven”, in Murder Ballads, performed by Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds:
    There's so much more I could have done if they'd let me! / So it's Rorschach and Prozac, and everything is groovy
  • 1997, Woody Tanger, Blood Games, Branden Books, →ISBN, pages 81-82:
    Goodman's dog takes Prozac. ... A guy who reminds you that no matter how crazy things get, it can always get worse. Goodman turns the Ridge into a Prozac-pushing dog kennel.
  • 2000 May, Dennis O’Brian, “Letters”, ABA Journal, American Bar Association, ISSN 0747-0088, page 14:
    The new “Prozac question” posed by the Virginia Board of Bar Examiners has not been tested in the courts.
  • 2001 August 13, Scott Bradner, “A Blurry Vision?”, Network World, IDG Network World, ISSN 0887-7661, page 30:
    On Aug. 2, right above a story about a new and cheaper generic version of Prozac, The New York Times announced the Internet of tomorrow. If the prediction comes true, network managers may be glad Prozac will be getting very cheap in a few months.
  • 2001 November, Donna Reis, “Plumbing and Psychosis”, Old House Interiors, Home Buyer Publications, ISSN 1079-3941, page 18:
    My doctor [] purses his lips / Suggests I start Prozac. / I think about this and wonder / How Prozac will summon the plummer.
  • 2009, Bruce Goldstein, Puppy Chow Is Better Than Prozac, The True Story of a Man and the Dog Who Saved His Life, Da Capo Press, →ISBN