Calloway, 32, is back in the spotlight for self-publishing a new book,"Elizabeth Wurtzel and Caroline Calloway's Guide to Life," and controversially weathering hurricane Milton.In the 2010s, she rose to fame as an early Instagram influencer, attracting hundreds of thousands of followers with pictures of her supposedly idyllic life studying art history at Cambridge University in England.
Woman, 22, says 73-year-old roommate is 'best' she's ever had despite large age gap: 'I have a friend for life'Dear Abby: I gained more than 100 pounds, and my husband is no longer attracted to me The new memoir mixes essays by Calloway with excerpts from the late Wurtzel’s 2001 advice tome, “The Secret of Life.”“I decided to stay to help my elderly neighbors and because evacuating for a hurricane is always a difficult and nuanced decision for any Florida resident,” she explained. “I’ve been making content in my down time because we’ve been trapped in doors, but it’s not why I stayed.
“I needed to find a way to make money,” said Calloway, who described herself as a “manic pixie nightmare” at the time. At the height of her addiction she was taking 90 milligrams of extended-release Adderall per day, the “legal maximum that you’re allowed to get in New York,” sheThe new memoir mixes essays by Calloway with excerpts from the late Wurtzel’s 2001 advice tome, “The Secret of Life.”“The truth is, I just had a lot of grief to process,” she said.