by Thomas Brown · 2014
Explains why high-IQ adults can still be profoundly impaired by ADHD; validates the experience of late-diagnosed gifted adults.
Best for: High-achieving adults who have received a late ADHD diagnosis and struggle to reconcile their intelligence with their impairments.
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Explains why high-IQ adults can still be profoundly impaired by ADHD; validates the experience of late-diagnosed gifted adults.
Brown links ADHD to emotion and the experience of being capable yet blocked. Speaks to bright adults who can't understand why effort alone doesn't translate into follow-through.
Best for: High-achieving adults who have received a late ADHD diagnosis and struggle to reconcile their intelligence with their impairments.
A note. This is reading material, not clinical treatment. If you’re working through something difficult, books complement therapy — they don’t replace it. Book a session with our team for personalised support.
More books in adhd & neurodiversity (adults).
Edward Hallowell & John Ratey
From the world's most-cited ADHD researchers; updated with neuroscience on the Default Mode Network.
Sari Solden & Michelle Frank
The first major workbook for adult women with ADHD.
Russell Barkley
Practical, evidence-based strategies for executive dysfunction.
Edward Hallowell & John Ratey
The classic that first named adult ADHD for millions; still the best starting point for a newly diagnosed adult.
Russell Barkley
Academic-but-accessible deep dive into ADHD as a disorder of self-regulation; recommended for clinicians and engaged clients.
Tracy Otsuka
Recent bestseller validating the under-diagnosed female ADHD experience with warmth and research-informed insight.
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