About the Author. Acknowledgements. Introduction. 1. What is Anger? 2. My Anger. 3. How Does Anger Occur? 4. Anger Control? 5. The Anger Gremlin. 6. Starving the Anger Gremlin. 7. Anger Do's and Don'ts. 8 Effects of Anger. 9. Summing Up! Appendices.
A CBT workbook to help children manage anger from the award winning Gremlin series
Kate Collins-Donnelly has worked as a therapist, psychologist, criminologist and anger management consultant based in the UK for many years. She presently runs a successful independent consultancy practice which provides cognitive behavioural therapy, counselling, coaching and training, and is head of the Psychological and Criminological Research Division. She is the author of several books for children and young people published by Jessica Kingsley Publishers, including Banish Your Body Image Thief, Banish Your Self-Esteem Thief and a range of titles in her Starving the Gremlin series.
Collins-Donnelly provides three CBT workbooks targeting stress,
anxiety and anger. A great feature of these books is that they are
geared towards teens. Although the book itself states it is for
youth aged 10+, the book is most appropriate for older teens. The
gremlin character is accessible for youth, without being too cute
and babyish for this age group. The extensive use of visuals and
repetition of topics and concepts makes this series a good fit for
youth on the spectrum. The workbooks encourage writing and drawing,
and youth who enjoy and have strength in reading will be able to
benefit... Overall, these workbooks serve as a great introduction
to cognitive behavioral therapy and can serve as a great adjunct to
in-person psychotheraphy. Teens are taught to identify the sources
of their stress, anger, and anxiety as well as the thoughts that
accompany these feelings. "Starving the gremlin" serves as a great
metaphor for changing your thoughts to change your behavior.
*On The Spectrum Magazine*
Starving the Anger Gremlin is an imaginative yet simply written
publication designed to assist young people to identify and take
appropriate action to deal with their responses to anger.
*Australian Journal of Guidance and Counselling*
This is a clearly written and helpful book for those struggling to
control feelings of anger.
*Juno*
If anger management is ever going to be fun, then this book is the
tool. It uses pictures, diagrams, quotes from young people,
checklists, questions, space for written answers, scenarios and
suggestions. The result is a lively and fully interactive resource
that will help young readers thoroughly explore what is happening
to them and how to find a calm way through their anger.
*Special Magazine*
‘Starving the Anger Gremlin does an excellent job of examining the
harmful effects of anger. Kate Collins-Donnelly clearly explains
how irrational thoughts influence negative emotions such as anger.
She also helps readers understand how they can change their
reactions to events by changing their thinking. Starving the Anger
Gremlin is a well-constructed manual on anger management that will
undoubtedly help children and adolescents. Read it and enjoy!’
*Jerry Wilde, Ph.D., author of Hot Stuff to Help Kids Chill Out:
The Anger Management Book*
Starving the Anger Gremlin is an absolute necessity for anyone
working with children and young people who may need help with their
anger. This workbook was recommended to me by a colleague and, as a
Headteacher, I have found it to be a fantastic resource for use in
the school with Key Stage 2 pupils. Pupils respond extremely well
to its easy to read style, relevant examples and empowering
approach. Support staff feel their knowledge in the area of anger
management has improved immensely and that the book provides
invaluable activities that they can work through with pupils in an
educational and supportive way. A superb and effective
resource!
*Headteacher, South Yorkshire, UK.*
I used Starving the Anger Gremlin with a 14 year old client who up
until that point had been extremely difficult to engage. He loved
the book and engaged with it immediately. I couldn't believe it! He
liked the fact that it was written in a non-judgemental way, that
it gave you constructive tools to use and discussed examples that
were relative to his world. He also found the quotes from other
young people reassuring as he realised that he wasn't on his own in
feeling and behaving the way he did. He is making great changes
thanks to the skills learnt. I would highly recommend this book to
practitioners and young people alike.
*Youth Worker, Derbyshire, UK.*
The clarity of the text and simplicity of the layout mean that
young readers could use the book independently or with the
supervision of a parent or carer, or as homework in between
sessions with a mental health worker.
*Young Minds*
The first thing I liked about this book was the fact that the
author addresses the intended reader first – the young person who
may seek self-help support and who may then wish to share with the
adults... The book is thin but packed with enough challenges and
tasks to be a useful addition to the shelves of every school
counsellor and youth worker... The book is mainly geared towards
the adolescent market, but I can see a use for this in primary
school as well as with some adults.
*Children's Webmag.*
Starving the Anger Gremlin is a workbook of activities designed for
young people with anger issues to work through on their own or with
a parent or professional to help guide... the workbook provides a
step-by-step approach to young people aged ten and over for
identifying and managing their anger.
*I CAN Communicate blog*
This book aims to offer a cognitive behavioural approach to
managing anxiety, suitable for those 10 years and above... The book
suggests that it can be used by the young person to work through or
alongside an adult or professional... The book goes on to describe
what anxiety is and what different types of anxiety exists... On
the whole I think this book is an excellent tool for prompting
discussion around anxiety, explaining anxiety to a child and
detaching them how to manage this response to situations.
*Adoption Social blog*
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