Submitted by kingkontroverseP0si t3_zutjs8 in books
[deleted] t1_j1mmnwm wrote
Reply to comment by Veer-Zinda in I fell in love and my interests in books changed drastically. by kingkontroverseP0si
That’s a long list. But -
1.) M.Scott Peck - People of the Lie
It’s essentially about human evil. One of the things abuse survivors do is lie to themselves about what’s happening. It’s really important to think about what is true.
2.) Psychopath Free - Jackson McKenzie
This was key for naming some of my craziest abuse situations as an adult.
3.) The Narnia Chronicles - CS Lewis
4.) The Lord of the Rings Trilogy - Tolkien
I swear those books help with a sense of felt safety.
Also, any author who clearly has a strong moral compass, in the secular humanist or any non denominational religious sense.
It’s important to reframe abuse as good vs evil, and visualize a world in which evil does not win.
Brandon Sanderson, Alastair Reynolds, Iain Banks, and again, Stephen King. Also, the poet Naomi Shehab Nye.
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