
Famesick, by Lena Dunham | Free Audiobook
30 April 2026Audiobook details
Nobody suspects a little girl. Nobody suspects an old lady.
In 1959, fifteen-year-old Mabel Waller was convicted of murder, making her the youngest person in Australian history to receive that sentence. Sixty years later, she goes by Elsie Fitzpatrick and lives alone on Kenny Lane, a quiet suburban Melbourne street where no one knows her real name. She has kept it that way on purpose, for a long time, without difficulty.
Two things break the arrangement at once. A neighbor dies, and the media connects the dots. When Elsie's past resurfaces publicly, two YouTubers show up wanting her story, and a seven-year-old girl named Persephone, newly arrived on the street with her mother Roxanne, refuses to take no for an answer. Mad Mabel moves between these two timelines, the 1950s and the present day, building a picture of who Elsie was before she became someone who hid.
Sally Hepworth, the New York Times bestselling author of The Soulmate and The Good Sister, writes dark and funny in equal measure. The mystery runs underneath the character study, and the two timelines keep pulling against each other until the ending settles the question that the whole book has been circling.

I did not expect to laugh this much at a book about murder. Sally Hepworth has written Elsie with a dry, cutting humor that hits hardest precisely because the material underneath it is serious. The combination is harder to pull off than it sounds, and she pulls it off consistently.
The dual timeline structure does real work here. The "Then" chapters, set in the 1950s, follow a young Mabel whose life is shaped by circumstances the present-day chapters only hint at. The "Now" chapters follow Elsie navigating the collapse of the quiet life she built. Neither timeline is a placeholder for the other. Both carry weight on their own, and the tension between them is what the book is actually about.
Persephone, the seven-year-old who decides Elsie is her person and refuses to be discouraged, is the best thing in the book. The scenes between them are funny because they are specific. Hepworth does not use the child as a device to soften Elsie. She uses her as a mirror, and the reflection is more complicated than you expect.
The mystery plot functions well without overwhelming the character study. You think you know where it is going at a certain point, and you are partly right, but Hepworth has structured the ending so that being partly right does not prepare you for the final pieces. I found the resolution genuinely satisfying, which is not always the case with thrillers that prioritize tone over plot.
Hannah Fredericksen and Jenny Seedsman split the narration across the two timelines, and the distinction works. Fredericksen handles the present-day Elsie with a precision that matches the character, flat and dry where the prose is flat and dry, something more open underneath when the story calls for it. Seedsman carries the younger Mabel with a different register, and the contrast between the two voices mirrors what the book is doing structurally. Over 9 hours and 20 minutes, the narration keeps pace without pushing.
Some links on this page are affiliate links. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases at no extra cost to you.
The free trial can be canceled anytime. The audiobook remains yours forever after the trial ends.
Mad Mabel by Sally Hepworth follows Elsie Fitzpatrick, an eighty-one-year-old woman living on a quiet Melbourne street who has spent sixty years concealing the fact that she was once convicted of murder at fifteen. When a neighbor dies and the press surfaces her past, the story she has kept contained starts to unravel across two timelines, 1950s Australia and the present day, with a seven-year-old girl and a dead man's dog complicating every effort she makes to stay invisible.
Take advantage of the free trial, cancellable at any time, and hear Hannah Fredericksen and Jenny Seedsman narrate this darkly funny thriller over 9 h 20 min. Their dual narration matches the two timelines and keeps the pacing sharp from the first chapter through the final twist.
The audiobook remains yours forever even after canceling the trial. The free trial also opens access to thousands of other titles, with no long-term commitment. Start listening now and take advantage of the offer.
US-based editor & staff writer focused on audiobooks. Honest reviews, curated “best of” lists, and practical guides with an accessibility lens.





