Lost Connections
Johann Hari
(Author)
21,000+ Reviews
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Description
The New York Times bestseller from the author of Chasing the Scream, offering a radical new way of thinking about depression and anxiety.
There was a mystery haunting award-winning investigative journalist Johann Hari. He was thirty-nine years old, and almost every year he had been alive, depression and anxiety had increased in Britain and across the Western world. Why? He had a very personal reason to ask this question. When he was a teenager, he had gone to his doctor and explained that he felt like pain was leaking out of him, and he couldn't control it or understand it. Some of the solutions his doctor offered had given him some relief-but he remained in deep pain. So, as an adult, he went on a forty-thousand-mile journey across the world to interview the leading experts about what causes depression and anxiety, and what solves them. He learned there is scientific evidence for nine different causes of depression and anxiety-and that this knowledge leads to a very different set of solutions: ones that offer real hope.Product Details
Price
$29.99
$27.89
Publisher
Bloomsbury USA
Publish Date
January 23, 2018
Pages
336
Dimensions
6.4 X 9.55 X 1.0 inches | 1.35 pounds
Language
English
Type
Hardcover
EAN/UPC
9781632868305
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Become an affiliateAbout the Author
Johann Hari is the New York Times bestselling author of Chasing the Scream. He was a columnist for the Independent in London for nine years and was twice named Newspaper Journalist of the Year by Amnesty International UK. He has written for the New York Times, Los Angeles Times, Slate, Le Monde, and others.
Reviews
"Lost Connections offers a wonderful and incisive analysis of the depression and alienation that are haunting American society." --Hillary Rodham Clinton
"If you have ever been down, or felt lost, this amazing book will change your life. Do yourself a favour--read it now." --Elton John "Wise, probing, and deeply generous Hari has produced a book packed with explosive revelations about our epidemic of despair. I am utterly convinced that the more people read this book, the better off the world will be." --Naomi Klein "This is a bold and inspiring book that will help far more than just those who suffer from depression. As Hari shows, we all have within us the potential to live in ways that are healthier and wiser." --Arianna Huffington "Through a breath-taking journey across the world, Johann Hari exposes us to extraordinary people and concepts that will change the way we see depression forever. It is a brave, moving, brilliant, simple and earth-shattering book that must be read by everyone and anyone who is longing for a life of meaning and connection." --Eve Ensler, author of THE VAGINA MONOLOGUES "This is one of those extraordinary books that you want all your friends to read immediately--because the shift in world-view is so compelling and dramatic that you wonder how you'll be able to have conversations with them otherwise." --Brian Eno "One of the world's most important and most enlightening thinkers and social critics." --Glenn Greenwald, winner of the Pulitzer Prize "Johann Hari is again getting people to think differently about our mood, our minds and our drug use, and that is something we need a lot more of." --Bill Maher "Depression and anxiety are the maladies of our time, but not for the reasons you think . . . An important diagnosis from one of the ablest journalists writing in the English language today." --Thomas Frank, author of WHAT'S THE MATTER WITH KANSAS "Eye-opening, highly detailed . . . The book is part personal odyssey, in which Hari gets to grips with the flaws in his own treatment, and part scholarly reflection, where he sifts through the varying perspectives of scientists, psychologists and people with depression . . . Hari is clear about the difficulties of the task ahead and, in offering new ways of thinking, presents not surefire solutions but, he says, 'an alternative direction of travel' . . . A compassionate, common-sense approach to depression and anxiety . . . His book brings with it an urgency and rigour that will, with luck, encourage the authorities to sit up and take note." --Guardian, "Book of the Day, 17 January 2018" "This book has a great deal to offer. Lost Connections isn't as much about science and mental health as it is about society, and the stories we tell around mental illness . . . This book's value lies in its attempt to change the stories we tell about the depressed and anxious, and perhaps help some of those suffering change how they think about themselves." --Independent "This well-written and well-documented book offers a powerful argument against the pharmacological treatment of depression and raises some provocative arguments. Highly recommended." --starred review, Library Journal