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101 Essays That Will Change The Way You Think by Brianna Wiest Review: A Dense, Ambitious Self-Help Collection
101 Essays That Will Change The Way You Think is a wide-ranging collection of short essays by Brianna Wiest, edited by Thought Catalog, designed to prompt introspection on mental health, emotional intelligence, personal growth, and the nature of happiness. Originally compiled from Wiest's best articles — including pieces previously published in digital outlets such as Thought Catalog and Huffington Post — the collection is unified by a central argument: that self-knowledge and self-compassion are within every person's reach, and that true happiness arises from purposeful living and ongoing self-actualization rather than external achievement. The review below is based on the book's contents and published reader commentary, not hands-on application.


Tap to enlargeLuvemBooks Verdict
Best for
Readers drawn to reflective, philosophically inflected self-help who prefer dipping in and out of standalone pieces rather than following a linear, prescriptive programme — particularly those interested in examining their own emotional patterns, assumptions, and relationship with happiness.
Worth it if
Worth reading if you're comfortable sitting with ideas and returning to individual essays at your own pace, and you respond to an accessible, conversational register over a formally structured self-help methodology.
Skip if
Skip it if you're looking for a tightly argued, step-by-step framework for personal development, or if you're new to self-help and need clear scaffolding to guide you from one concept to the next.
What readers & critics say
Reader reviewers broadly praise the collection's accessibility and capacity for genuine self-reflection — LinkedIn reviewer Biswas describes the essays as "eloquently written, each with simple and easy to read points," awarding the book 4.5 out of 5, while Audible's summary notes Wiest's consistent critique of consumerism and pursuit of happiness through external success as core strengths. The most recurring criticism, flagged at marloyonocruz.com, is that the sheer density of 101 standalone essays — each packed with "several nuggets of wisdom" — makes the collection hard to absorb in sustained stretches, with some readers needing to pause regularly between chapters.
Sources: LinkedIn (Biswas review), marloyonocruz.com, Audible, lifeinlines.substack.com, app.thestorygraph.com, brandoncannon.comLook inside the book
Preview the actual pages, via Google BooksIn This Review
- What Works & What Doesn't
- What the Book Is and How It Came Together
- The Central Argument Across 101 Essays
- Reception and Perceived Strengths
- A Real and Recurring Limitation: Density and Digestibility
- Who This Collection Is Genuinely For
What Works & What Doesn't
What Works
- Originated from Wiest's best-performing published articles, giving the collection a proven, reader-tested editorial foundation
- Covers a notably wide range of topics — from the psychology of daily routine to emotional intelligence to solitude — within an accessible, conversational register
- Stand-alone essay format allows readers to engage non-linearly, returning to individual pieces without losing context
- Reader commentary describes the essays as easy to read and genuinely thought-provoking, with each piece designed to prompt self-reflection rather than passive consumption
- Critiques external measures of success and consumerism with a consistent philosophical through-line anchored in self-knowledge and self-compassion
What Doesn't
- The density of ideas across 101 standalone essays can be cognitively overwhelming; some readers report needing to pause frequently to absorb each piece
- Essays are not grouped thematically and were not conceived as a sequential whole, so readers seeking a structured, progressive framework for personal development will find the format lacking clear scaffolding
What the Book Is and How It Came Together

The Central Argument Across 101 Essays

Reception and Perceived Strengths

A Real and Recurring Limitation: Density and Digestibility

Who This Collection Is Genuinely For
Frequently Asked Questions
Sources & Further Reading
The key facts and claims in this review are grounded in the retrieved, verified sources listed below.
- Cited in this review
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- Further reading
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lifeinlines.substack.com
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app.thestorygraph.com
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