
Anne Sheffield
Author of How You Can Survive When They're Depressed: Living and Coping with Depression Fallout
Works by Anne Sheffield
How You Can Survive When They're Depressed: Living and Coping with Depression Fallout (1998) 119 copies, 1 review
Depression Fallout: The Impact of Depression on Couples and What You Can Do to Preserve the Bond (2003) 71 copies, 1 review
Sorrow's Web 1 copy
Tagged
Common Knowledge
Members
Reviews
Depression Fallout: The Impact of Depression on Couples and What You Can Do to Preserve the Bond by Anne Sheffield
First thing I should mention- the forum frequently mentioned still exists, just not at the URL it was at in 2003 (which happens- I know several online communities have moved addresses over the past decade). You can find the Depression Fallout community here. Future editions of this book should update URLs and the web resources list.
This book was not for me- I am the depressed partner, not the one experiencing fallout. It was recommended to me by a counselor as something for my partner & I show more to read when I mentioned that sometimes my partner says he doesn't understand my sense of sadness & self-loathing. I read it first because it's hard to split a book between two people.
It is a useful book in that the experiences of various anonymous posters show that you're not alone, and that a community can be useful for navigating through the ups and downs of relationships with depressed/manic depressed individuals. It illuminated for me some of the reasons why a previous relationship of mine failed, though again every relationship is different and I am somewhat skeptical about drawing conclusions from a self-selecting forum population.
The reasons I *don't* like the book aren't about content- on the contrary, I find this topic very important. Rather, the writing reminds me of an older person not used to the internet- E-mail, Web site, and Message Board are always capitalized as if they're proper nouns; in the introduction Sheffield expresses surprise and delight that people came together and formed a community online; etc. On one hand, that can be explained as the nature of the internet in 2003 and earlier (myspace came into existence that year), but to a modern reader it seems outdated. I am also skeptical of using anecdotes from a forum as evidence, but if we can have books derived from reddit AMAs, I guess it's valid. show less
This book was not for me- I am the depressed partner, not the one experiencing fallout. It was recommended to me by a counselor as something for my partner & I show more to read when I mentioned that sometimes my partner says he doesn't understand my sense of sadness & self-loathing. I read it first because it's hard to split a book between two people.
It is a useful book in that the experiences of various anonymous posters show that you're not alone, and that a community can be useful for navigating through the ups and downs of relationships with depressed/manic depressed individuals. It illuminated for me some of the reasons why a previous relationship of mine failed, though again every relationship is different and I am somewhat skeptical about drawing conclusions from a self-selecting forum population.
The reasons I *don't* like the book aren't about content- on the contrary, I find this topic very important. Rather, the writing reminds me of an older person not used to the internet- E-mail, Web site, and Message Board are always capitalized as if they're proper nouns; in the introduction Sheffield expresses surprise and delight that people came together and formed a community online; etc. On one hand, that can be explained as the nature of the internet in 2003 and earlier (myspace came into existence that year), but to a modern reader it seems outdated. I am also skeptical of using anecdotes from a forum as evidence, but if we can have books derived from reddit AMAs, I guess it's valid. show less
I read about 4 chapters and found that, even though some of the information is good, it gets lost in alot of her personal agenda about depression. I may hand this on or bring it back to MeetUp to cross. I think there is good information in there but you need to read it critically.
Kids relate their life stories as examples of why 750,000 children drop out of school each year.
You May Also Like
Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 6
- Members
- 222
- Popularity
- #100,928
- Rating
- 3.7
- Reviews
- 3
- ISBNs
- 10








