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So Sad Today  By  cover art

So Sad Today

By: Melissa Broder
Narrated by: Melissa Broder
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Publisher's summary

From acclaimed poet and creator of the popular Twitter account @sosadtoday comes a darkly funny and brutally honest collection of essays.

Melissa Broder always struggled with anxiety. In the fall of 2012, she went through a harrowing cycle of panic attacks and dread that wouldn't abate for months. So she began @sosadtoday, an anonymous Twitter feed that allowed her to express her darkest feelings and that quickly gained a dedicated following.

In So Sad Today, Broder delves deeper into the existential themes she explores on Twitter, grappling with sex, death, love, low self-esteem, addiction, and the drama of waiting for the universe to text you back. With insights as sharp as her humor, Broder explores - in prose that is both ballsy and beautiful, aggressively colloquial and achingly poetic - questions most of us are afraid to even acknowledge, let alone answer, in order to discover what it really means to be a person in this modern world.

©2016 Melissa Broder (P)2016 Hachette Audio

Critic reviews

"Melissa Broder's essays are as raw as an open vein." (Molly Crabapple, author of Drawing Blood)
"With a title recalling Yeats...Broder risks the divine in her second book...shrewd, funny, twisted, sad poems...." ( The Chicago Tribune)
" So Sad Today is a desperately honest collection of essays, the kind that make you cringe as you eagerly, shamelessly consume them. Melissa Broder lays herself bare but she does so with strength, savvy, and style. Above all, these essays are sad and uncomfortable and their own kind of gorgeous. They reveal so much about what it is to live in this world, right now." (Roxane Gay, New York Times best-selling author of Bad Feminist)

Featured Article: 13 Listens to Get Through the SAD-dest Time of Year


Have you ever felt stuck or lonely during winter months? This isn’t just a you problem. Something about those gray skies and short days really gets to us—and while the onset of winter brings its own challenges, these last few weeks of the season can feel interminable. Whether you hope to learn more about seasonal depression, embrace your feelings, or look for some escapism, these listens can power you through the end-of-winter blues.

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Connection

I absolutely loved this book. I’ve never connected to a book on such an intimate level.

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11 people found this helpful

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I wish I could commit to something half as much as Broder committed to this book

Broder is uncomfortably honest then entire book, which made me feel ridiculously comfortable while reading it. I related to every word on every page. Her chapter on her husband’s chronic illness was the most accurate account of what it’s like to have an invisible illness (I have similar illnesses and have read a stupid number of books written by other sick people- but she did it better than most). She is eerily accurate about the ugliness of illness. Her understanding of her own flaws, as well as others without being judgmental is incredible. She gets it.

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I get why it’s not for everyone

Honestly I understand why some people can’t stomach this book but it’s one of the most brutally honest and insightful things I’ve ever read about mental health

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What an excellent experience…

I like to consider myself fairly connected when it comes to popular culture, but somehow I’d never stumbled upon Melissa Broder’s work before - never stumbled upon SO SAD TODAY, her Twitter feed about her own personal struggles and life with anxiety and depression. Things many people experience on one level or another. Things I’ve struggled with for as long as I can remember but never felt totally comfortable fully expressing until more recently on my Instagram feed. I definitely want to visit her feed more to see the germination of tweets that would become the full blown essays that populate this book cause I too have been interested in taking posts from my Instagram and expanding upon them. To that end I’ve been listening to Natalie Goldberg and Joyce Maynard about writing creative nonfiction, and I love how both encourage us to read. Having ploughed through May Sarton’s JOURNAL OF A SOLITUDE, I stumbled upon Broder on Amazon Kindle and Audible and picked up her book. It felt like discovering Leonard Cohen for the first time in his work BEAUTIFUL LOSERS. Broder’s work here is brave, no experience too taboo. All ultimately heartfelt and having just finished listening to her read, I feel a reverence for her. I tried to be brave in a university course a few years ago in a work I masked as fiction, but although I scored 98% on it I got chastised for the parts I had chose to read aloud, as the content was darker and explored my loneliness and confusion with sexuality. I never told the teacher that several classmates, most female approached me after the class to thank me for sharing and to keep writing cause it was powerful. She too, the professor, didn’t say it wasn’t great or anything and shared their enthusiasm but the comment about what to share or not always kinda stuck too me, especially as the me too movement happened not long after that class. But like Goldberg and Maynard both said, if it’s honest and true, then don’t shy away from sharing your experiences. And I’m glad Broder did just that. A fascinating read, and interesting trajectory of growth and discovery for the book itself. It makes me think of Weir’s THE MARTIAN, how he released it piecemeal over many years online and then on Kindle for free (or as close to free as they allow), and it got more and more exposure. But I digress. Read this. Especially if you’re young and trying to find your place in the world. There’s so much truth here.

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Interesting

Anyone who is just a bit off and has struggled with their own minds will immediately understand this book, even if the specific instances listed by the author aren't similar to their own - it does get pretty graphic with descriptions of sexual acts, but this is greatly overshadowed by how brutally honest it is; I certainly couldn't open up this much to the general public, and it's worth a read just for that alone.

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rough book to listen to as a guy .

depression seems different for everyone. she turned to sex it seemed I did to once upon a time then, now, I've turned to isolation and celibacy.

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Love this book of Essays

Would you listen to So Sad Today again? Why?

I can't imagine the courage it takes to be this brave and open about - well everything. All the great moments and dark humor in this book are well worth the read. Thank you so much for sharing, I really loved every minute of it.

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Unexpected yet beautiful

When I first started listening I was disappointed by the layout until I got over myself and really listened. Well written and insightful throughout the stages of ones life. Bravo

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Thank you!

I've just finished it and already know it will mean a lot to me. Thank you so much for this.

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Melissa is the realest

I have never, and I mean never, related to a book of essays as much as I have SST.
Melissa has captured the madness that is existential dread, anxiety and depression in a way that is humorous and real.
I’m very much looking forward to her next book and all the other work she will share.

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