(Don't) Call Me Crazy: 33 Voices Start the Conversation about Mental Health
By (Author) Kelly Jensen
Workman Publishing
Algonquin Young Readers
1st November 2018
2nd October 2018
United States
Young Adult
Non Fiction
616.890092
Commended for Schneider Family Book Award (Teen) 2019
Paperback
240
Width 176mm, Height 226mm, Spine 16mm
460g
What does it mean to be crazy Is using the word crazy offensive What happens when such a label gets attached to your everyday experiences
In order to understand mental health, we need to talk openly about it. Because theres no single definition of crazy, theres no single experience that embodies it, and the word itself means different things wild extreme disturbed passionate to different people.
(Dont) Call Me Crazy is a conversation starter and guide to better understanding how our mental health affects us every day. Thirty-three writers, athletes, and artists offer essays, lists, comics, and illustrations that explore their personal experiences with mental illness, how we do and do not talk about mental health, help for better understanding how every persons brain is wired differently, and what, exactly, might make someone crazy. If youve ever struggled with your mental health, or know someone who has, come on in, turn the pages, and lets get talking.
Full contributor list: Hannah Bae, Aura/Monique Bedard, Kristen Bell, Libba Bray, Gemma Correll, Reid Ewing, Hannah Gomez, Ashley Halstrom, Heidi Heilig, Christine Heppermann, Shaun David Hutchinson, Mary Isabel, Lisa Jakub, Kelly Jensen, Susan Juby, Mike Jung, S. Jae-Jones, Nancy Kerrigan, Stephanie Kuehn, Emery Lord, Emily Mayberry, MILCK, Amy Reed, Meredith Russo, Yumi Sakugawa, Victoria Schwab, Adam Silvera, s.e. smith, Jessica Tremaine, S. Zaniab Williams, Clint Van Winkle, Dior Vargas, Esm Weijun Wang.
A Washington Post Best Childrens Book of 2018
Jensen has brought together sharp and vivid perspectives concerning mental-health challenges. Featuring writers such as Shaun David Hutchinson, Libba Bray, Adam Silvera and Esm Weijun Wang, this book asks questions and provides real-life experiences and hope for the future.
Washington Post, Best Childrens Books of 2018
This (crucially!) diverse essay collection spans race, gender, sexual orientation, career, and age to hopefully reduce the stigma around mental illness.
Bustle
Empowering . . . deeply resonant . . . With this diverse array of contributors offering a stunning wealth of perspectives on mental health, teens looking for solidarity, comfort, or information will certainly be able to find something that speaks to them. Resources and further reading make this inviting, much-needed resource even richer.
Booklist
Lively, compelling . . . the raw, informal approach to the subject matter will highly appeal to young people who crave understanding and validation . . . This highly readable and vital collection demonstrates the multiplicity of ways that mental health impacts individuals.
Kirkus Reviews
Thought-provoking . . . Misconceptions about mental health still abound, making this honest yet hopeful title a vital selection.
School Library Journal, starred review
This is a much-needed collection of writing about mental health and the impact it has . . . with mental health stigma unfortunately still being a serious problem, teens really need books like this right now.
Cultured Vultures
The spectrum of voices and stories is wonderful to read. Not only that, but it mixes already published pieces as well as original memoir type stories. (Dont) Call Me Crazy deals with the power of diagnosis/labels not being the same for everyone, and the inequality in the mental health discussion. It is an anthology that stresses individual experiences, support, and listening. If you want to read more about it, Jensen also includes a reading list. So it leaves you not only with more experience, but a jumping board of where to go next. It is equally hopeful, cathartic, inspiring and real.
Utopia State of Mind
This is a much-needed collection of writing about mental health and the impact it has . . . with mental health stigma unfortunately still being a serious problem, teens really need books like this right now.
Cultured Vultures
The spectrum of voices and stories is wonderful to read. Not only that, but it mixes already published pieces as well as original memoir type stories. (Dont) Call Me Crazy deals with the power of diagnosis/labels not being the same for everyone, and the inequality in the mental health discussion. It is an anthology that stresses individual experiences, support, and listening. If you want to read more about it, Jensen also includes a reading list. So it leaves you not only with more experience, but a jumping board of where to go next. It is equally hopeful, cathartic, inspiring and real.
Utopia State of Mind
Kelly Jensen is a former librarian-turned-editor for Book Riot and Stacked. Shes the author of It Happens: A Guide to Contemporary Realistic Fiction for the YA Reader. She loves black licorice and debating genre. Follow her on Twitter: @veronikellymars.