1 item successfully added to your wishlist

0 items successfully added to your cart

There was a problem adding to your cart. Please try again.

Skip to content
product gallery

Strangers To Ourselves

Unsettled Minds and the Stories That Make Us

by Rachel Aviv

New York Times Book Review Top 10 Books of the Year

'Captures with subtlety and empathy the honest reality of mental illness'
The Times
There are stories that save us, and stories that trap us, and in the midst of an illness it can be very hard to know which is which...
Strangers to Ourselves shares the experiences of five people who have come up against the limits of psychiatric explanations for who they are. It asks, do the stories we tell around mental illness affect its course, its outcomes, even our identities?

Drawing on in-depth reporting, written testimonies and formative events in her own childhood, award-winning New Yorker writer Rachel Aviv offers a subtle, compassionate, revelatory account of how we understand ourselves in periods of crisis and distress.

'Aviv finds language for the most ineffable registers of human experience' Wall Street Journal
'Profoundly intelligent... superbly written portraits'
Guardian
A best book of the year in the Los Angeles Times, Time, Washington Post, New Yorker, and Vogue

READ MORE

on order from publisher

Please note: Pre-order and on order items will ship as soon as they arrive in store.

Pages:

288

Published:

Jan 2024

Format

Paperback

Publisher

Penguin Random House

Imprint

Vintage

ISBN:

9781529111651

New York Times Book Review Top 10 Books of the Year

'Captures with subtlety and empathy the honest reality of mental illness'
The Times

There are stories that save us, and stories that trap us, and in the midst of an illness it can be very hard to know which is which...

Strangers to Ourselves shares the experiences of five people who have come up against the limits of psychiatric explanations for who they are. It asks, do the stories we tell around mental illness affect its course, its outcomes, even our identities?

Drawing on in-depth reporting, written testimonies and formative events in her own childhood, award-winning New Yorker writer Rachel Aviv offers a subtle, compassionate, revelatory account of how we understand ourselves in periods of crisis and distress.



'Aviv finds language for the most ineffable registers of human experience' Wall Street Journal

'Profoundly intelligent... superbly written portraits'
Guardian

A best book of the year in the Los Angeles Times, Time, Washington Post, New Yorker, and Vogue

$30.00
Add to wishlist
You might also like

You might also like

View all psychology & the brain