
Thanks to Hachette Book Group, we have three copies of this book to giveaway!
A groundbreaking approach to a healthier way of thinking—which “may well be the single most important psychology book ever written.” Read more about Redirect.
To enter just leave a comment and tell us the name of a psychology book you’ve read in the past. Make sure you leave a valid email address. Giveaway ends Tuesday September 20th.
-Only residents of the U.S. or Canada are eligible to win
-No P.O. Boxes, please. Canadian winners must have phone numbers.
-Winners will be subject to the one copy per household rule, which means that if they win the same title in two or more contests, they will receive only one copy of the title (or one set in the case of grouped giveaways) in the mail.
Do the “Chicken Soup for the —- Soul” books count? Or, Conversations with God? Most good books carry some type of psychological message, this one sounds pretty intriguing.
I read Moonwalking with Einstein earlier this year, which is about the science of memory. There were some elements of psychology in there.
i’ve read a few books about parenting psychology — one called Awakening Children’s Minds about how children grow and thrive based on parental teaching and nurturing. This one sounds very good!
The last nonfiction book I finished was READING LIKE A WRITER. I’m also in the middle of Natalie Angier’s WOMAN. I am enjoying it very much.
oops please delete that last comment. It was meant to be on the next post…
Last psychology book I read was “The Psychology of Paranormal Belief: A Researchers’ Handbook”
misusedinnocence@aol.com
The last psychology book I read was The Psychopath Test by Jon Ronson.
akreese at hotmail dot com
I just read A First Rate Madness by Nassir Ghaemi, a book about leaders with mood disorders and how the mood disorders actually helped them.
abookishaffair(at)gmail(dot)com
Our Journey from Childhood Dream to Gold by Tessa Virtue and Scott Moir with Steve Milton has some sections on sports psychology that I thought were enlightening.
The Art of Choosing was amazing!
I read How We Decide (title’s pretty self-explanatory) by Jonah Lehrer last month!
I have read “What Happy People Know” recently
I made the mistake of buying Redirect – a used copy via the web – and it showed up smelling like fish. Which was probably an omen.
Let me sum it up for you. If you enjoy verbose, aimless prattling. If you like long books with little substance. If wading through a morass of preachy gibberish to find an occasional point is your kind of reading – then this is your book!