Frédéric Fanget, Catherine Mayer
and Pauline Aubry (ill.). Translated by Edward Gauvin. The Anxiety Club, a graphic guide to understanding anxiety.
SelfMadeHero, 2024. https://store.abramsbooks.com/products/the-anxiety-club
Modern life definitely demands a
guide to navigate the daily obstacles and attempts to achieve a sense of
composure in the daily grind. The presence of anxiety and other psychological
troubles keep creeping in trying to detour oneself from the path of the daily
hustle bustle. French creators psychiatrist Dr. Frédéric Fanget, co-author Catherine
Meyer and illustrator Pauline Aubry explain how anxiety can manifest itself,
how it can cause threatening scenarios, and most importantly how anxiety, in
whatever intensity it may show up, can be treated through Anxiety Therapy. The
book itself is divided into five chapters that discuss in detail the many
aspects of anxiety and how it is imperative to recognize them and find the
right kind of treatment.
In the authors’ own words, the book
is to “decatastrophize anxiety.” This graphic novel is a guidebook about
surviving with anxiety as this psychological problem is depicted and then shown
being dealt with. In the first two chapters of the book, readers are introduced
to the multiple ways of how anxiety can show up and how one can try and
identify it. This is done by using day-to-day terms and phrases which makes
identifying the problem accessible and easy. The quirky titles of the chapters such
as “anxiety’s disaster camera” or the “faces of anxiety” and the lingo the
authors use are not only relatable, but also help in retaining information.
Even though the authors have
fictionalized the anxious people, renamed and anonymized them, the book keeps
the character of Dr Fanget as himself. This choice to not fictionalize the
doctor gives the reader a sense of security and confidence in receiving correct
information. The chapter on anxiety treatment is the key element of this book.
It brings together all the questions that people suffering from anxiety might
raise and the ways in which they could be answered. The treatments are divided
into three parts depending on the intensity of the anxiety one is under.
This book is a delightful read about
a very serious problem faced by people of all ages as the world is progressing disconcertingly
faster technologically. The question one asks of a self-help type of book is
about its authenticity and reliability, which Dr Fanget’s presence in the book
as a narrator answers. However, those who seek this as self-therapy for anxiety,
may or may not find one here, but between the gutters, they may identify their
own symptoms.
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