Reviews for Quiet power : the secret strengths of introverts

Horn Book
(c) Copyright The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

A distillation of the concepts in Cain's adult book Quiet, here focused on situations likely to affect kids and teens with anecdotes from young introverts. Quiet Power discusses the challenges of introversion as well as the titular strengths, providing the same validation as the original without being patronizing. Occasional cartoons lighten the overall tone. (c) Copyright 2016. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.


Kirkus
Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

The author of the bestselling Quiet (2012) collaborates with Mone and Moroz to bring her message of empowerment for quiet types to teen readers. Cain opens by placing introverts on "what's called a spectrum" (an infelicitous term, considering its more common usage in psychology) with extroverts on the opposite end and vaguely defined "ambiverts" in the middle. She goes on to draw from her own experiences as well as those of psychologists and a dozen or so first-name-only teens to affirm that there's nothing abnormal about preferring to work alone rather than in groups, thinking before speaking, being "differently social," and needing a place to unwind in solitude. Along with assuring less outgoing readers that they have plenty of company, from Einstein to Beyonc, she discusses distinctive "superpowers" that introverts can employspecifically at school and in managing peer relationshipseither for their own comfort or as coping mechanisms for public speaking and like stress producers. In her view "introverted" is not the same as "shy," but these techniques will be equally useful to both sorts of readers. For those with short attention spans she closes each chapter with summary lists of points and behavioral tools (for those with even shorter ones, Web cartoonist Snider converts many to visual form), and she goes on in a pair of afterwords to provide guidelines for parents and make a case against forced participation in classroom discussions. Standard-issue self-help: worthy enough but wordy and heavily earnest, addressed to a broad audience but unlikely to attract one. (notes, index) (Nonfiction. 13-17) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

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