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Things Might Go Terribly, Horribly Wrong

Things Might Go Terribly, Horribly Wrong

A Guide to Life Liberated from Anxiety

by Kelly G. Wilson

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Should I read this?

appears in Social Anxiety, For Social Anxiety, and Psychology.

You don't need a book to tell you this much: Sometimes things fall apart, crack open, and miss the mark. You can plan and strategize and keep your eye on the horizon, watching for trouble. And nothing you can do will protect you from the fact that things might, when you least expect it, go terribly, horribly wrong. If you're anxious about this, it'...

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Why recommended

appears in Social Anxiety, For Social Anxiety, and Psychology.

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The Boy, the Mole, the Fox and the Horse
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Consider The Boy, the Mole, the Fox and the Horse by Charlie Mackesy. Recommended by 8 sources.

Soft-spoken, heavily illustrated fable built from short dialogues and watercolor sketches. Each spread pairs a spare line of text with a loose drawing, so the pleasure is visual and aphoristic rather than narrative; readers collect felt-true sentences more than plot. Most useful when you want quick consolations, a prompt for conversation with a child, or a pause during a rough day. Limiting if you want sustained argument, concrete advice, or tightly plotted storytelling: the repetition of gentleness can feel sentimental or thin after a while.

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Each recommendation is collected from a public source — interviews, articles, or curated lists — and linked to its original URL. Books with many verifiable recommendations from respected people rank higher.

Things Might Go Terribly, Horribly Wrong

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