Theres a lot in life to be angry about, and we shouldnt be repressing that. The distinction between bad anger and good anger is a crucial one. A marvellous book which enhances our understanding of ourselves and others. * Irvine Welsh * Sam Parkers examination of anger is thrillingly incendiary I havent been able to think about anger in the same way since. * Alice Vincent, author of Rootbound and Why Women Grow * Compulsory reading Grounded in wisdom from across time and culture, Parker offers us a variety of enlightening perspectives on this complicated subject. In todays maddening world dismissing anger simply isnt an option, we have to learn to live better with it. * Dr. Aaron Balick, psychotherapist and author of The Psychodynamics of Social Networking and The Little Book of Calm * Powerful and engaging ... Parker's fluent book, which draws on dozens of stimulating examples from Aristotle to Tony Soprano has wisdom to offer about tackling unhappiness ... Whatever your own background or temperament, there is much to digest and utilise in this moving story of recovery and renewal ... Good Anger is a potent defence of a vilified emotion and a compelling invitation to sit with it a little longer. * Martin Chilton, The Independent * A delightful dive into our most maligned emotion. If you feel angry and the whole world seems to be right now this book will help you understand, and perhaps feel better about it. * Oliver Franklin-Wallis, author of Wasteland * This book is wise in the way a good therapist or a clever friend is wise it leads us gently towards our greatest fears and reveals that the thing were taught to suppress might be the key to making our lives infinitely better. Far from a book for angry people, its a book for all of us who smugly shrug and say 'oh I never get angry'. It is quietly, gently revolutionary and it will make you feel both naked and relieved that youre not the only one struggling. Crucially, it will give you the confidence to turn anger to your advantage. It is one of those books youll want to buy for the people closest to you to let them in on the secret. Because this book isnt just about anger, it is, above all, about hope. * Kate McCann, broadcaster, Times Radio * A great book ... If you want to figure anger out then this book is for you. * Isabel Berwick, the Financial Times * An enlightening read ... Parker is especially insightful on female anger. * Mail on Sunday * A generous and rigorous exploration of an emotion we could all do with understanding better. * Natasha Lunn, author of Conversations on Love * I think I may have a new hero. For Sam Parker has written a book, and that book is called Good Anger and the title alone has been enough to blow my tiny mind The idea that anger might be allowable, that it might be capable of being channelled as a force for good is the most profound, absurd, frightening, liberating one I have ever heard.
Sam Parker is my new man, my pole star, my homie, my ride-or-die. * Lucy Mangan, i * A Must-Read Book * The Next Big Idea Club * A thoroughly reported, groundbreakingly insightful personal journey through the dark side of anger and into the light. * The i Paper * A clarifying and subversive look at the history of one of the most natural human emotions, Good Anger travels through ancient philosophy, history and socio-politics in order to reframe the negative connotations of rage. * GQ * Anger is not the problem, its how you express it. Expressing it properly is hugely beneficial. The how is a little harder, but this is an eloquent explanation of how you can do just that. * Daniel Fryer, author of How to Cope with Almost Anything with Hypnotherapy * A best book of 2025 so far ... In this thoughtful and considered account, Parker looks at the history of our understanding of anger and posits a theory that by channelling it in the right ways it can be a force of empowerment and, ultimately, for good. * Esquire * Parker argues that anger can be a vital force for personal growth, happiness and even professional success. The book is part memoir, part manifesto and entirely a product of its cultural moment: an era when weve learned to hashtag our sadness and destigmatise our anxiety, but still treat anger like a contagious rash. * Protein * GLAMOUR Best New Books of June 2025 * Glamour *