1. Learned Optimism
Martin Seligman · 1991
The research that founded positive psychology, built on one simple finding: how you explain bad events to yourself predicts whether you give up.
Seligman writes as a research psychologist, and the book carries the weight of decades of studies rather than anecdote, which makes it slower going than most books on this list but more convincing. The three-dimension framework (permanence, pervasiveness, personalization) is genuinely one of the more useful diagnostic tools in the whole self-improvement genre.
Read it if: you want the research-backed case for why explanatory style shapes resilience, with a real test to diagnose your own
Skip it if: you want a quick motivational read, this is a research book first, with a self-help layer on top, and it reads accordingly





