The Next Generation of Self-Help Books Will Make You Feel Seen

It wasn’t very long ago that self-help books were stigmatized. No one wanted to be caught browsing in that section of the bookstore, and reading them made people feel sorry for you. But that has totally changed.

First, the internet — well, for better or worse, Amazon — completely changed how we shop for and purchase books. On top of that, our views about getting help for stress and mental health conditions are, fortunately, shifting toward broader acceptance. Not everyone has access to affordable mental health care, so for a lot of people, getting help or seeking counsel in books is their first strategy.

Also, “self-help” looks different to everyone. For some, it may mean reading about someone else’s experiences that are so similar to their own they feel less alone in the world. For others, it could be more clinical descriptions of conditions that validate how they’re feeling.

Whichever type you’re looking for, here are our suggestions for books to pick up as we head into the new year.

How to Be Alone

If you’re familiar with Lane Moore’s work as a writer, editor, funny person, musician and/or dog mother, you already know she can do everything. Now that her debut book How to Be Alone is out, we can add “author who totally gets us and helps us understand things about ourselves we didn’t even realize” to the list.

Moore writes about what it was like to be her own parent, live in her car, spend the holidays alone and pick up and move to New York City. It at once manages to be both realistic and romantic and is a comforting read from start to finish.

How to be Alone (paperback), $12.42 at Amazon

Attached

Attached: The New Science of Adult Attachment and How It Can Help You Find  and Keep  Love sounds like your typical relationship self-help book, but we assure you, it’s not. First of all, it’s not a manual full of fluffy romantic advice detailing how to get married.

This book is based on science and written by a psychiatrist and neuroscientist who use empirical research to explain why some people seem to effortlessly slide in and out of relationships, while others struggle to connect and commit with potential partners. This is the type of read that lays out the facts in an objective way and lets readers draw their own conclusions, analyzing their relationship pattern.

Attached (paperback), $10.84 at Amazon

You Are a Badass

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Please let us know if rushing all the blood to your head after reading the books makes a difference, @quittingbydesign! I think that's a very innovative idea. Plus it's always a good idea to look at things upside down. You never know what you'll discover. Thanks for posting and for being #BadassOfTheWeek! · · · @quittingbydesign: Finally finished both of the Badass books by @jensincero … now to rush all the blood to my brain so the info sinks in! . #youareabadass #badassoftheweek . . . #newperspective #yaybooks #readingisfun · · · If you'd like to be chosen as #BadassoftheWeek and have your awesome self broadcast far and wide over the Badass socialsphere, please post a pic of yourself with my book(s) to your public Instagram account (extra points for extra creative/hilarious shots), tag me (@jensincero) and include the hashtag #BadassoftheWeek! Thaaaaaaank you!

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Of all the books on this list, Jen Sincero’s book You Are a Badass: How to Start Doubting Your Greatness and Start Living an Awesome Life is the closest to traditional self-help reading material. Don’t let that dissuade you from picking this one up, though  it’s been out for more than five years but is still making waves with its humorous real talk, advice and service components.

If the voice of your inner critic is a little too loud or imposter syndrome has taken over your professional life, this book might be a way to get back on track.

You Are a Badass (paperback), $9.60 at Amazon

The Jane Austen Diet

No, this isn’t the latest fad diet book that suggests you plan your meals like a member of Regency aristocracy. The Jane Austen Diet: Austen’s Secrets to Food, Health and Incandescent Happiness, by Bryan Kozlowski draws from Austen’s iconic books, distilling a few modern takes on health and wellness.

As the first nonfiction title to examine Austen’s historic approach to “health and happiness” and its surprising parallels with modern science, Kozlowski’s book is a fun, witty look the way we think about creating a healthy life, both mentally and physically. 

The Jane Austen Diet (paperback), $15.29 at Amazon

Cringeworthy

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What a nice night my book is having

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What makes us cringe and why does that happen? If this is something you’ve thought about when someone says the word “moist” or you watch Michael Scott’s antics on an episode of The Office, Cringeworthy: A Theory of Awkwardness may be the book for you. Again, this is not a traditional self-help title, but rather an inside look into awkwardness and embarrassment.

In addition to explaining how our brains work, this book by New York Magazine senior editor Melissa Dahl helps us better understand our own feelings and reactions to embarrassing situations. Chances are it’ll make you feel better the next time you experience one.

Cringeworthy (hardcover), $18.36 at Amazon

The Sleep Revolution

For a long time, getting enough sleep was seen as a sign of weakness. Managing to function on a few hours of sleep each night was a badge of honor, proving that you’re so in-demand that society requires you to be awake as much as possible.

Of course, that’s not true, and Arianna Huffington wants everyone to know that. In her 2017 book, The Sleep Revolution: Transforming Your Life, One Night at a Time, she lays out why sleep is so important for all aspects of your work, personal and sex life. Using science and guidelines from experts, Huffington has given us the ultimate guide to  and reasoning behind  getting a good night’s sleep.

The Sleep Revolution (paperback), $10.87 at Amazon

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