Understanding changes how you carry it.
Recommended Reading
Many clients ask what they can do between therapy sessions to better understand their reactions, patterns, and emotional responses. As a trauma-focused therapist providing online therapy in Florida, I created this curated reading library to support that process.
This page includes therapist-recommended mental health books on trauma, boundaries, relationships, identity, and nervous system healing. These resources are designed to support therapy, not replace it. By giving language to experiences that are often hard to explain.
You don’t need to read everything here. One book at the right time is often enough. Move at your own pace and choose what feels relevant to where you are right now.
Different format options are listed for accessibility.
If reading feels difficult to focus on, audiobooks can be a more accessible way to engage with this work.
Bookshop supports independent bookstores, Amazon offers quick access and multiple formats, and Libro.fm provides audiobooks while also supporting local bookstores.
If you’re new to audiobooks, you can start with 3 audiobooks through Libro.fm Some people find listening to be an easier entry point, especially during overwhelming or busy seasons.
How to use this page
- Start with the category that matches what you’re currently working on
- Choose one book at a time
- Reading is optional support, not homework
- Insight grows through reflection, not speed
Transparency
I personally read or reviewed each resource before recommending it. Some links are affiliate links, which may provide a small commission at no additional cost to you and help support maintaining this library. These materials are educational and do not replace individualized therapy.
Curated by a trauma-focused and EMDR therapist providing online therapy across Florida.
If you’re recognizing yourself in these patterns, therapy can help you move beyond understanding and into actual change. You don’t have to figure this out on your own.
Trauma & Nervous System
Understanding what your mind and body are reacting to can make therapy feel less confusing and less personal. These are trauma-informed books I regularly recommend to clients who want language for what they’ve experienced between sessions.
Not sure where to start?
Begin with The Body Keeps the Score or Complex PTSD: From Surviving to Thriving.
The Body Keeps the Score — Bessel van der Kolk
A foundational trauma book explaining why the brain and body continue reacting long after an experience has ended — and why healing has to involve more than talking.
Best for: understanding why you still react even when you “know you’re safe.”
If you’ve ever felt like your body reacts before your mind can catch up — or like you “know you’re safe” but don’t feel it — this book helps explain why.
When the Body Says No — Gabor Maté
Explains how chronic stress and emotional suppression show up physically and why symptoms often carry emotional meaning.
Best for: people noticing burnout, illness, or exhaustion tied to emotional stress.
If you’ve been pushing through exhaustion, stress, or people-pleasing for so long that your body is starting to push back, this book helps you understand the cost of that pattern.
The Biology of Trauma — Aimie Apigian
A clear look at how trauma lives in the nervous system and why healing requires working with the body, not just thoughts.
Best for: readers who want a science-based explanation of trauma reactions.
If you want to understand your trauma on a deeper, body-based level — not just psychologically — this book connects the science to what you actually feel day to day.
Listen: Audible
My Grandmother’s Hands — Resmaa Menakem
Explores how trauma is stored in the body across generations and how regulation can be relearned.
Best for: understanding how stress lives in the body and affects relationships
If you’ve felt that stress, tension, or pain lives in your body — especially in ways connected to identity, culture, or generational experiences — this book helps you begin to work with that, not against it.
Read: Bookshop | Amazon
Listen: Libro | Audible
Trauma Stewardship — Laura van Dernoot Lipsky
For people who care deeply and carry a lot — helps prevent burnout without disconnecting from empathy.
Best for: helpers, caregivers, therapists, and highly responsible people
If you’re the one everyone leans on — the strong one, the helper — but you’re quietly feeling overwhelmed or drained, this book helps you care for others without losing yourself.
Read: Bookshop | Amazon
Listen: Libro | Audible
Complex PTSD: From Surviving to Thriving — Pete Walker
A powerful guide to understanding complex PTSD through lived experience — including emotional flashbacks, the fawn response, toxic shame, and the inner critic. Many readers recognize themselves in these patterns for the first time and realize their reactions have a history, not a flaw.
Best for: adults who grew up having to be the responsible one or feel triggered without knowing why
If you’ve always felt like your reactions are intense, confusing, or tied to something deeper you can’t fully name, this book helps you understand the patterns that didn’t start with you.
Read: Amazon
Listen: Libro | Audible
The Pain We Carry — Natalie Y. Gutiérrez
A culturally grounded exploration of complex trauma through the lens of communities of color. This book examines how complex PTSD shows up in first-generation, immigrant, and identity-conflicted experiences, filling an important gap often left out of traditional trauma literature.
Best for: first-gen, immigrant, or identity-conflicted readers processing emotional patterns in a cultural context
If your experiences don’t fully fit into traditional conversations about trauma — especially shaped by culture, identity, or immigration — this book helps put language to what you’ve lived.
Read: Bookshop | Amazon
Listen: Libro | Audible
Healing the Soul Wound — Eduardo Duran
An essential work introducing historical and colonial trauma as clinical realities. Duran reframes pathology through cultural and historical context, shifting how we understand shame, grief, and diagnosis in Indigenous and marginalized communities.
Best for: readers exploring intergenerational trauma, cultural grief, and identity-based pain
If you’ve felt a deeper, inherited, or collective layer of pain — something that goes beyond your individual experiences — this book helps you understand that in a broader, more meaningful context.
Read: Bookshop | Amazon
Listen: Not available in audio format.
If you’re recognizing yourself in these patterns, therapy can help you work through them, not just understand them. Start therapy
Boundaries & Emotional Responsibility
Healthy boundaries aren’t just about saying no — they’re about understanding what emotions, expectations, and responsibilities actually belong to you. Many adults struggling with anxiety, burnout, resentment, or relationship conflict were taught to manage other people’s feelings before their own. These therapist-recommended books help you recognize people-pleasing patterns, step out of emotional over-functioning roles, and build healthier relationships without guilt.
Not sure where to start?
Start with Set Boundaries, Find Peace for everyday communication, or Stop Caretaking the Borderline or Narcissist if you feel responsible for someone else’s emotions.
Set Boundaries, Find Peace — Nedra Glover Tawwab
Clear, practical language for expressing limits without guilt, over-explaining, or emotional spiraling. Helps translate boundaries into everyday conversations and relationships.
Best for: people-pleasers and over-explainers who feel responsible for others’ reactions.
If you know you need boundaries but feel guilty, anxious, or unsure how to say things without overexplaining, this book helps you start doing it in a way that actually feels doable.
Drama Free — Nedra Glover Tawwab
Focuses on family dynamics and how to disengage from patterns that keep you emotionally entangled while staying connected.
Best for: adults navigating difficult family relationships and recurring conflict.
If you feel pulled into the same family dynamics over and over — even when you try to step back — this book helps you understand how to disengage without cutting yourself off completely.
Stop Caretaking the Borderline or Narcissist — Margalis Fjelstad
Explains the caretaker role many people develop and why stepping out of it feels uncomfortable but necessary for emotional health.
Best for: those who feel responsible for someone else’s moods, stability, or wellbeing.
If you’ve been carrying the weight of someone else’s emotions, stability, or behavior — and feel responsible for keeping things “okay” — this book helps you begin to step out of that role.
Break the Cycle — Dr. Mariel Buqué
Explores inherited relational patterns and how emotional survival strategies pass between generations — and how to consciously interrupt them.
Best for: people noticing repeating relationship patterns they never chose.
If you’re starting to notice patterns in your relationships or emotional responses that feel inherited or repeated, this book helps you understand where they come from — and how to begin changing them.
If you’re recognizing yourself in these patterns, therapy can help you work through them — not just understand them. Start therapy
Parenting & Child Development
Children’s behavior makes more sense when you understand what their brains and nervous systems are trying to communicate. Tantrums, withdrawal, clinginess, aggression, regression — these aren’t “bad behavior.” They are signals. Often overwhelmed, attachment needs, stress, or developmental transitions. These books help parents respond in ways that support emotional regulation, secure attachment, and long-term nervous system health — not just short-term obedience.
Not sure where to start?
Start with The Whole-Brain Child for practical daily tools, or The Emotional Life of the Toddler if you want a deeper attachment-based understanding of early behavior.
The Emotional Life of the Toddler — Alicia Lieberman
Explains toddler behavior through attachment, emotional development, and nervous system regulation rather than discipline alone. Helps parents understand what big emotions actually mean in early childhood.
Best for: parents of toddlers navigating tantrums, separation anxiety, or intense emotional shifts.
If your child’s emotions feel big, unpredictable, or overwhelming — and you’re trying to understand what’s actually going on beneath the behavior — this book helps make sense of it.
The Whole-Brain Child — Daniel Siegel
Explains how children’s brains develop and how to respond to big emotions in ways that strengthen integration and resilience. Practical tools grounded in neuroscience and attachment.
Best for: parents who want everyday strategies for emotional regulation and connection.
If you want practical ways to respond to your child’s emotions without feeling reactive or unsure in the moment, this book gives you tools that actually translate into everyday parenting.
Don’t Hit My Mommy — Alicia Lieberman
Supports families in helping children process fear, exposure to conflict, and safety concerns in developmentally appropriate ways. A trauma-informed resource for young children impacted by stress at home.
Best for: families navigating conflict, fear, or emotional dysregulation in early childhood.
If your child has been exposed to stress, conflict, or fear — and you’re noticing changes in their behavior or emotions — this book helps you understand what they may be processing internally.
Listen: Not available in audio format.
Make Room for Baby — Alicia Lieberman
Helps older siblings adjust emotionally to a growing family and the attachment shifts that come with it. Normalizes jealousy, regression, and big feelings during transition.
Best for: families expecting a new baby and wanting to protect sibling attachment.
If you’re preparing for a new baby and want to support your older child through the emotional shifts that come with that transition, this book helps you navigate it with more awareness and care.
Listen: Not available in audio format
Losing a Parent to Death in the Early Years — Alicia Lieberman
Guidance for helping young children understand and process grief in ways their developing brains can handle. Focuses on emotional safety and attachment preservation during loss.
Best for: caregivers supporting young children through death and early grief.
If you’re supporting a young child through grief and don’t know how to explain or hold something this big at their developmental level, this book offers guidance that feels both gentle and grounded.
Listen: Not available in audio format
No-Drama Discipline — Daniel Siegel
A connection-based approach to discipline that builds regulation instead of fear compliance. Teaches parents how to correct behavior while strengthening attachment.
Best for: parents wanting firm boundaries without shame or emotional escalation.
If you want to set limits and guide behavior without yelling, shaming, or escalating — but aren’t always sure how to do that in the moment — this book helps you respond with more clarity and connection.
Relationships & Attachment Patterns
Many adult relationship patterns don’t come from lack of effort; they come from early emotional learning. We repeat what our nervous system recognizes as familiar, even when it no longer feels good. These books help make sense of connection, distance, conflict, and emotional roles so relationships stop feeling confusing and start feeling understandable. These are books I often recommend when relationship patterns start repeating in ways that feel confusing, painful, or hard to break
Not sure where to start?
Start with All About Love for a clear framework of healthy connection, or The Will to Change if emotional shutdown or miscommunication keeps showing up in relationships.
All About Love — bell hooks
Reframes love as care, honesty, responsibility, and mutual growth rather than control or sacrifice. Helps separate attachment from possession and connection from obligation.
Best for: people unlearning unhealthy relationship patterns or redefining what love should feel like.
If you’re starting to question what love has actually meant in your life — and realizing it may have included sacrifice, confusion, or self-abandonment — this book helps you redefine love in a way that feels healthier and more honest
The Will to Change — bell hooks
Explores how emotional suppression — especially in men — shapes communication, intimacy, and conflict in relationships. Helps readers understand shutdown, avoidance, and misunderstanding through context rather than blame.
Best for: partners navigating emotional distance, communication struggles, or recurring relationship conflict.
If you’ve experienced emotional distance, shutdown, or miscommunication in relationships — especially with men — and want to understand what’s underneath that, this book offers clarity without blaming yourself.
Women Who Run With the Wolves — Clarissa Pinkola Estés
Uses storytelling and archetype to reconnect readers with intuition, boundaries, and inner authority, often shaped by early relational conditioning.
Best for: those rebuilding self-trust after losing themselves in relationships.
If you feel like you’ve lost parts of yourself in relationships — your voice, your instincts, your sense of self — this book helps you reconnect with that deeper inner knowing.
If you’re recognizing yourself in these patterns, therapy can help you work through them — not just understand them. Start therapy
Identity, Culture & Power
Our emotional lives don’t form in isolation. Family roles, culture, race, gender expectations, and history all shape how we cope, what we carry, and what we believe we’re allowed to feel. These books help move struggles out of personal failure and into context, where understanding replaces self-blame. These books explore how identity, culture, and lived experience shape emotional patterns — especially when traditional frameworks don’t fully reflect your reality.
Not sure where to start?
Start with Decolonizing Therapy to understand how mental health frameworks can miss lived experience, or Rest Is Resistance if exhaustion feels deeper than just being busy.
Decolonizing Therapy — Jennifer Mullan
Challenges traditional therapy frameworks and centers lived experience, systemic context, and cultural reality in emotional healing. Helps readers see why some approaches never fully fit.
Best for: People who feel misunderstood or unseen in traditional mental health spaces.
If you’ve ever felt like traditional therapy didn’t fully see you — your culture, your lived experience, your reality — this book helps explain why, and validates that nothing is “wrong” with you.
Rest Is Resistance — Tricia Hersey
Reframes rest as a biological and emotional need rather than laziness within productivity culture. Connects burnout with historical and social context.
Best for: Chronic exhaustion, burnout, and guilt around slowing down.
If you feel constantly exhausted but also guilty for slowing down — like rest has to be earned — this book helps you understand why your body is asking for something different.
Decolonizing Trauma Work: Indigenous Stories and Strategies — Renee Linklater
Expands the understanding of trauma to include land, community, history, and cultural disruption. Through Indigenous perspectives and lived experiences, it reframes symptoms not as pathology but as responses to disconnection and survival.
Best for: Intergenerational trauma, racial or cultural identity wounds, first-generation experiences, and anyone who feels their history is bigger than a single life event.
If your pain feels bigger than just your personal experiences — connected to family, history, or cultural identity — this book helps you understand trauma in a deeper, more collective way.
Sister Outsider — Audre Lorde
Essays exploring identity, voice, anger, and difference with clarity and precision that still resonate across generations.
Best for: Readers learning to trust their voice and experience.
If you’ve struggled to fully trust your voice, your anger, or your truth — especially in spaces where you’ve had to shrink yourself — this book helps you reclaim that clarity.
Hood Feminism — Mikki Kendall
Expands conversations about gender, survival, and daily realities often left out of mainstream narratives. Connects emotional well-being with material and social conditions.
Best for: Understanding how environment shapes emotional stress and resilience.
If you’ve ever felt like mainstream conversations about healing or empowerment don’t fully reflect your reality — this book helps connect emotional well-being to real-life conditions and lived experience.
Grief & Life Transitions
Sometimes distress doesn’t come from something being wrong — it comes from something being different. Loss, change, growing up, moving on, or becoming someone new can all require internal adjustment, even when life keeps moving. These books support the emotional process of adapting, grieving, and making meaning when life shifts, but there’s nothing to fix.
Not sure where to start?
Start with Clap When You Land if you’re actively grieving, or The House on Mango Street if you’re reflecting on identity, belonging, or life direction.
Clap When You Land — Elizabeth Acevedo
A story of sudden loss, identity, and connection that captures how grief unfolds emotionally rather than logically. Helps readers recognize the layered experience of mourning and relationship after death.
Best for: Readers processing loss, unexpected change, or complicated family grief.
If you’re navigating loss that doesn’t feel simple or linear — where grief is tangled with identity, relationships, or unanswered questions — this book helps put language to that complexity.
The House on Mango Street — Sandra Cisneros
Short reflective stories about identity, belonging, and growing into yourself across time and experience. Offers language for transitions that don’t have clear endings.
Best for: People navigating life transitions, identity shifts, or feelings of in-between.
If you’re in a season of becoming — outgrowing parts of your life, questioning where you belong, or trying to understand who you’re becoming — this book meets you in that in-between space
Meaning & Reflection
Not all growth comes from fixing problems. Sometimes it comes from questioning roles, expectations, and definitions of success you inherited without choosing. These books support reflection, inner authority, and identity development beyond performance — the kind of growth that feels quieter but more stable.
Not sure where to start?
Start with The Heroine’s Journey for a clear framework of identity development, or The Altar Within if you’re exploring inner meaning and personal ritual.
The Heroine’s Journey — Maureen Murdock
A developmental framework that moves beyond achievement-based success and toward integration, self-trust, and inner balance. Helps readers understand phases of growth that don’t look like external progress but still matter deeply.
Best for: People reevaluating purpose, roles, or the definition of success in adulthood.
If you’re questioning your path, your roles, or what success is supposed to look like — especially after doing everything “right” — this book helps you reconnect with a more authentic direction.
Listen: Audible
The Altar Within — Juliet Diaz
Guides readers through reflection, symbolism, and intentional practices that reconnect inner identity and meaning. Focuses on listening inward rather than constantly reacting outward.
Best for: Those wanting a grounded, personal approach to spirituality and self-connection.
If you’re craving a deeper connection with yourself — beyond external expectations, roles, or noise — this book supports a more intentional, inward way of living.
Reading can help you understand what you’re feeling. Therapy helps you actually change the patterns. If you’re ready for that next step, you don’t have to do it alone.
