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Your Brain’s Not Broken
I have just finished Your Brain’s Not Broken and it feels like a book that truly understands ADHDers. Tamara Rosier writes with clarity and empathy, making the experience of living with a differently wired brain feel validated rather than judged. The book reads like a conversation, blending science, personal stories, and practical strategies in a way that is accessible, engaging, and easy to follow from start to finish. One of the strongest aspects of the book is how it refra

Rae Sabine
3 days ago1 min read


Queer Art of Failure
The Queer Art of Failure is a bold and playful challenge to conventional ideas of success, productivity, and social norms. Halberstam reframes failure as a creative and radical act, showing how refusing dominant expectations can open space for alternative ways of living, relating, and being. Drawing on film, literature, performance, and popular culture, the book illustrates how failing can be both joyful and empowering, offering readers a way to question what society values.

Rae Sabine
Apr 122 min read


The Teenager's Guide to Burnout: Finding the Road to Recovery
I really valued how this book explores burnout as a whole rather than presenting it as something only neurodivergent teenagers experience. It shows that anyone pushed too far can reach the point of exhaustion. The authors explain how burnout builds slowly and normalise it as a human response rather than a personal failure. The discussion about school stood out as especially important. The authors highlight how testing, social pressure, and constant expectations can make schoo

Rae Sabine
Apr 41 min read


The AutPlay® Therapy Handbook
Robert Jason Grant’s The AutPlay® Therapy Handbook is a thoughtful guide for working with neurodivergent children through play. The approach is integrative and flexible, offering techniques alongside a framework for understanding each child’s unique way of engaging with the world. It is an accessible read for practitioners and most useful for those who want to integrate play-based approaches into their work. The book blends evidence-based practice with a strong relational and

Rae Sabine
Mar 271 min read


Colouring the Rainbow: Blak Queer and Trans Perspectives
For National Close the Gap Day I want to share a powerful anthology that broadens how we think about wellbeing, culture and justice for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities. Colouring the Rainbow: Blak Queer and Trans Perspectives brings together voices often missing from mainstream conversations. Through essays and reflections, Blak queer and trans writers share experiences of identity, belonging and survival with honesty, care and cultural depth. What stands ou

Rae Sabine
Mar 191 min read


The Anger Management Sourcebook
The Anger Management Sourcebook offers a wide range of practical tools for understanding anger, including identifying triggers, building coping strategies, and improving communication. The exercises are generally accessible and may be helpful for readers who are new to anger management or seeking structured self help material. As a skills focused resource, the book functions best as an introductory text rather than a comprehensive or context sensitive guide. A key limitation

Rae Sabine
Mar 111 min read


They, He, She: Words for You and Me
They, He, She: Words for You and Me is a bright and playful board book that introduces young children to pronouns in a simple and approachable way. The text is clear and friendly, encouraging children to explore how words can describe themselves and others. It presents pronouns as natural and flexible, giving little readers space to notice what feels right without pressure or expectation. The illustrations are bold, colorful, and joyful, showing diverse characters in fun and

Rae Sabine
Mar 31 min read


Neurodivergent, by Nature
Neurodivergent, by Nature is an engaging mix of memoir, neurodivergence education, and nature writing. Harkness writes with a grounded and thoughtful voice, occasionally punctuated with humour, moving from honest reflections on mental health to small moments of absurdity that provide levity without undermining the subject. Some of the language used around neurodivergence surprised me, as it did not always feel entirely neuroaffirming, but the book still creates a reading expe

Rae Sabine
Feb 231 min read


My Body, My Brain
This book is a gentle and affirming picture book for children aged 3 and up. It explores how children experience and interact with the world, celebrating that every child is unique. Some children are talkative, some prefer quiet. Some enjoy movement, others enjoy stillness. All of these ways of being are valid and valuable, and differences are important and meaningful. The illustrations by Inge Daniels bring the story to life. Children are shown engaging in a variety of activ

Rae Sabine
Feb 141 min read


Nonviolent Communication
Nonviolent Communication is often presented as a communication framework, but at its heart it is a practice of relating with greater honesty, responsibility, and compassion. Rosenberg invites readers to slow down and notice how everyday language can move quickly into judgement or blame, even when our intentions are caring. The focus is less on saying the right thing and more on creating conditions for genuine understanding and connection. The core structure of observation, fe

Rae Sabine
Feb 61 min read


The First Astronomers: How Indigenous Elders read the stars
This book is a remarkable and deeply respectful collaboration between astrophysicist Duane Hamacher and Indigenous Elders and Knowledge Holders from across Australia. The book weaves together scientific insight with ancient cultural knowledge, showing that astronomy has always been a human practice grounded in observation, meaning, and relationship with the land and sky. It invites readers to look up differently and to recognise the depth of wisdom in the world’s oldest conti

Rae Sabine
Jan 212 min read


Take Me With You
Andrea Gibson’s Take Me With You is a small book of big truths. Written in fragments and lyrical passages, it feels both intimate and expansive, like carrying a pocket-sized collection of revelations. Gibson explores identity, love, loss, and the complexity of being human with a voice that is raw, tender, and unafraid to lean into vulnerability. One of the most striking threads is Gibson’s reflection on gender and belonging. They write with clarity that makes the in-between f

Rae Sabine
Jan 131 min read


The Parents' and Professionals' Simple Guide to PDA
This book offers a clear and compassionate introduction to PDA for parents, caregivers and professionals supporting PDAers across home, school and therapeutic settings. I appreciated the way it explains PDA as a nervous-system-led experience, helping adults move beyond behaviour toward understanding stress, anxiety and the need for autonomy. The language is respectful and grounding, supporting readers to reframe interpretations without blame or judgement, creating space for c

Rae Sabine
Jan 51 min read


Between Two Worlds
Between Two Worlds is a book that feels like opening thirty windows at once. Each piece offers a view that is distinct, powerful, and deeply human. The anthology gathers stories of migration, belonging, and in-betweenness, but it resists neat categories. Instead it shows us what it means to live across languages, cultures, and histories, and how that shapes both loss and possibility. What struck me most was the range of voices, sharp, tender, questioning, and generous. Some s

Rae Sabine
Dec 29, 20251 min read


The Body Keeps the Score
This book is often described as essential reading for anyone interested in trauma and healing, and I can see why. Van der Kolk brings decades of clinical experience and research together in a way that feels both accessible and deeply human. The stories and examples throughout the book give a real sense of how complex trauma can be and how it shapes people’s lives in lasting ways. It also offers valuable insight into how trauma affects memory, relationships, and the nervous sy

Rae Sabine
Dec 19, 20251 min read


Syllabus
Lynda Barry’s Syllabus is an unconventional teaching guide presented in the form of a hand-drawn composition notebook. It gathers together classroom notes, doodles, exercises, and reflections, creating a book that feels alive in both form and content. The visual style is playful, messy, and layered, drawing readers into the atmosphere of her studio and classroom. At its heart, the book argues that creativity is not a rare gift but a natural part of being human. Barry’s prompt

Rae Sabine
Dec 12, 20251 min read


Georgie: The Plot Solidifies
I’ve been waiting for the next Georgie book, and The Plot Solidifies jumps straight into the story without missing a beat. It’s great to have the gang back together, though not everyone is where they used to be. Hayler and Cute Guy seem to have moved on, while Troylene are stronger and more inseparable than ever. Georgie herself appears to have love interests, maybe even a chance at something real this time, but as always, nothing is ever simple in her world. The pacing feels

Rae Sabine
Dec 5, 20252 min read


Double Exposure
This has been the best book I have read in 2025. Double Exposure: A Life Visible in Two Genders is honest, tender, and deeply thoughtful, staying with you long after you close the pages. The writing invites reflection on identity, love, and the human need to be seen fully. It offers insight into a very unique life, showing resilience, authenticity, and the complexity of living openly, giving a vivid sense of the challenges and rewards of being fully seen and understood. I fir

Rae Sabine
Nov 25, 20252 min read


Laziness Does Not Exist
I thought this book was going to be more focused on neuronormative standards but was surprised to learn about the broader impacts of the laziness lie. The book shows how the belief that our value comes from constant productivity runs deep in our culture and how it harms people across many different contexts. What often gets called laziness is more accurately the result of exhaustion, unmet needs, or barriers outside of our control, and this argument is made with clarity and c

Rae Sabine
Nov 18, 20252 min read


The Kids' Simple Guide to PDA
This book offers a warm and thoughtful introduction to PDA for children, families and schools. I appreciated the way it reframed PDA traits in terms of being perceptive, determined and autonomous. This strengths-based language supports children to understand themselves without shame and encourages adults to shift from reacting to behaviour toward understanding underlying needs. The tone remains gentle and respectful, which helps younger readers feel recognised and supported.

Rae Sabine
Nov 11, 20252 min read
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