Reasons to Stay Alive: Difference between revisions
Content deleted Content added
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 24:
}}
📘 '''''Reasons to Stay Alive''''' is a 2015 nonfiction memoir by British author Matt Haig that recounts his severe depression and anxiety and how he learned to live again.
== Chapter summary ==
''This outline follows the Canongate hardcover edition (5 March 2015), ISBN 978-1-78211-508-3.''
🕳️ '''1 – Falling.''' On a September day in Ibiza, 24-year-old Matt Haig walked from a quiet villa toward a seaside cliff, counting the steps he thought would end the pain. For three sleepless days he had lain in a hot room while his girlfriend, Andrea, brought water and fruit, the window propped open for air. Outside, the scent of pine and salt hung in the heat, the Mediterranean glittered below, and the cliff edge sat fewer than twenty paces away—he even set a target of twenty-one steps. The fear of death never vanished, but the agony of staying alive felt heavier, and he hovered at the brink, mustering courage first to die and then, unexpectedly, to live. Thoughts of his parents, sister, and Andrea—the love that would be left behind—pulled him back, and the release made him retch from stress. The first hours of breakdown come as a racing heart, a tingling at the back of the skull, panic’s suffocation, and the shock of discovering an illness others cannot see. Depression can be invisible from the outside yet catastrophic within, widening the gap between appearance and reality. In brief fragments, the section maps the drop from functioning adult to someone who can barely stand, naming the terror without clinical jargon. Extreme distress narrows attention until life feels binary—end it or endure it. Connection and time reopen the tunnel, and the project of collecting reasons to keep going begins with a single refusal to step forward.
Line 41:
== Background & reception ==
🖋️ '''Author & writing'''. Haig has described the book’s origin in his breakdown at 24 and his long recovery, writing publicly about suicidal thoughts and stigma in an essay for ''The Observer''.
📈 '''Commercial reception'''. Haig’s site records that ''Reasons to Stay Alive'' was a ''Sunday Times'' number-one bestseller and stayed in the UK top ten for 49 weeks, with international publication by 29 publishers. <ref name="HaigRTSA" /> The book was shortlisted for Waterstones Book of the Year 2015. <ref name="Waterstones2015Shortlist">{{cite web |title=Waterstones Book of the Year Shortlist: Reasons to Stay Alive |url=https://www.waterstones.com/blog/waterstones-book-of-the-year-shortlist-reasons-to-stay-alive |website=Waterstones Blog |publisher=Waterstones |date=19 November 2015 |access-date=28 October 2025}}</ref> In the United States, Penguin Books released the edition in 2016, and ''Entertainment Weekly'' named it among the year’s notable nonfiction selections.
👍 '''Praise'''. ''The Guardian'' called it “a highly personal and creative response to crisis,” highlighting its humane lists and time-split dialogues. <ref name="Guardian2016Kennedy" /> The ''Star Tribune'' praised it as “equal parts self-help and memoir… quick, witty and at times profound.” <ref name="StarTrib2016">{{cite news |last=Filgate |first=Michele |title=Review: ‘Reasons to Stay Alive,’ by Matt Haig |url=https://www.startribune.com/review-reasons-to-stay-alive-by-matt-haig/373410821 |work=Star Tribune |date=1 April 2016 |access-date=28 October 2025}}</ref> ''Kirkus Reviews'' described it as “a vibrant, encouraging depiction of a sinister disorder.” <ref name="Kirkus2016">{{cite web |title=REASONS TO STAY ALIVE |url=https://www.kirkusreviews.com/book-reviews/matt-haig/reasons-to-stay-alive/ |website=Kirkus Reviews |publisher=Kirkus Media |date=3 November 2015 |access-date=28 October 2025}}</ref>
| |||