Nathan Dunne was born in Brisbane, Australia and grew up in India. After graduating from the University of Sydney with the University Medal, he studied art history at Cambridge University and received a PhD from Birkbeck College, University of London. He has lectured at Harvard and Yale, and also worked for several years at Tate Modern. As a journalist and critic, he has contributed to many publications, including The Washington Post, The Atlantic, The Boston Globe, The Guardian, Slate and Artforum. He now lives in Sydney.
'Imagine losing your sense of self in an instant. You no longer recognize your face, your body, even your own voice. You have become a ghost, disconnected to everyone and everything around you. This is what it is like living with depersonalization disorder. In Nathan Dunne's exquisitely written and deftly researched memoir, When Nothing Feels Real, Dunne takes us on his arduous journey to find a diagnosis and cure for this devastating illness. This book broke my heart but also gave me hope. There is so much yearning here, so much longing to live and to love and to be whole again. This is a brave and beautiful book.'Mira Bartok, author of The Memory Palace: A Memoir 'This book is a vital and timely exploration of a poorly understood and devastating mental illness, and a powerful meditation on the fragility and resilience of selfhood. It will resonate profoundly with all those who question what it means to be ourselves, and what it is to be human.' Elinor Cleghorn, author of Unwell Women 'When Nothing Feels Real took a lot of courage to write. It captures the pain and mystery of depersonalisation as well as its art and science. Professor Anthony David, Neuropsychiatrist and Director of the UCL Institute of Mental Health 'Nathan Dunne is a writer of such touching sympathies and affinities and generosity and pure gifts of language and mastery of both echoes internal and in the air.' Cynthia Ozick, author of The Puttermesser Papers and Antiquities 'Dunne's writing is extraordinary, original and rewarding.' Robert Cottrell, BBC Culture 'Jeepers! That's some illness.' - Peter Goldsworthy 'His vivid descriptions of losing himself are graphic, visceral and, at times, alarming - powerful storytelling' Becca Whitehead, Books + Publishing