Reading is a great pastime, especially if you have a mental illness. Reading is engaging enough (with the right book) to help distract the reader from side effects of medications or symptoms of the disorder. Also, reading can provide helpful information (depending on the book) for coping skills. Many people find reading soothing, as well. Reading is one of my favorite hobbies, hence the selection of books below. Enjoy!
Alex Michaelides
Chelsea C. Moye
M. Billiter
S. J. Laidlaw
Laurie Halse Anderson
James Anderson
Amy Engel
Josh Malerman
Regan McDonell
Shane Peacock
Joseph Knox
Haylen Beck
Melissa Scrivner Love
Caroline Kepnes
Kyle Idleman
Lysa TerKeurst
Kat Lee
Saundra Dalton-Smith, M.D.
Jen Schmidt
Trillia J. Newbell
Nick Hall
Brad McKoy
Mesu Andrews
Caleb Kaltenbach
Banning Liebscher
Chris Shook & Megan Shook Alpha
Eugene H. Peterson
Jenny Lawson
Faith Salie
Jacqueline Novak
Rob Roberge
Scott Reintgen
Naomi Novik
Jennifer Ryan
Dinah Jefferies
David Jaher
Lilly Singh
Mike Michalowicz
A quick overview to pumping life, Patterson gives you the low down while also helping you decide if you are actually interested in this pumping lifestyle.
Quick and easy to read, the guide to all you never knew you needed to know about going back to work (in any capacity) as a new mom.
Kendra Adachi
Rachel Hollis
Chelsea Johnson
William Davis, MD
Marie Kondo
Pearl Barrett & Serene Allison
Crystal Hemmingway
Jojo Moyes
Jojo Moyes
With poems that delight, enthrall, and even make you cry with their dark beauty, Reverie is just as hard to stop reading the second time as the first.
From the viral poem "OCD" to many of Hilborn's other, lesser known works, this book of poetry deals with mental illness, suicidal ideation and more emotion than you thought could fit in the pages.
Susan Rieger
(You Haven't Read Yet)
You've (Probably) Never Heard Of
(With 5 Easy Steps)
(of Nearly Fifty Read)