Introduction: What Are Self-Help Books? At its core, a self-help book is a manual written with the explicit intention of instructing its reader on solving a personal problem. These problems can range from the deeply psychological (overcoming trauma) to the pragmatically mundane (organizing a desk). The genre operates on a simple, seductive premise: through acquired knowledge and applied technique, you can reshape your circumstances, habits, and identity.
From Marcus Aurelius’s Meditations (a cornerstone of Stoic philosophy) to Rhonda Byrne’s The Secret (a phenomenon of the "law of attraction"), self-help is not a modern invention but a continuously evolving conversation about human potential, suffering, and agency. The roots of self-help lie in ancient philosophy. Aristotle’s Nicomachean Ethics explored how to live a virtuous and flourishing life (eudaimonia). Epictetus taught that we cannot control events, only our responses to them. Self Help Books