The Book of Woe: The DSM and the Unmaking of Psychiatry by Gary Greenberg is a powerful exposé on the inner workings of the American psychiatric system. This eye-opening book explores how the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM) shapes our understanding of mental illness—and why that might be deeply flawed.
Greenberg, a practicing psychotherapist and investigative journalist, offers an insider’s view of the political, scientific, and ethical battles behind DSM-5, the most recent edition at the time of writing. With wit, clarity, and a dose of skepticism, he unveils how diagnoses are created, debated, and often decided by consensus rather than scientific proof.
What the Book of Woe Covers
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The making of DSM-5: Learn how the American Psychiatric Association (APA) developed and revised its controversial manual.
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Disorders as constructs: Greenberg argues that many diagnoses are not discoveries but inventions—reshaped by social, political, and economic pressures.
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The medicalization of normal life: From grief to shyness, the book questions how ordinary experiences become pathologized.
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Voices from inside: Through interviews with scientists, doctors, and APA members, the book reveals conflicting agendas within the profession.
Why The Book of Woe Matters
This book is more than a critique—it is a call to rethink how we define and treat mental illness. Greenberg questions the authority of the DSM and challenges its role as the “Bible” of psychiatry. He raises important questions: Who gets to define what’s normal? Can psychiatry truly rely on objective science? And what happens when flawed definitions shape real people’s lives?
Perfect For
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Mental health professionals and students
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Readers of investigative nonfiction
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Anyone curious about the politics of psychiatry
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Critics of over-diagnosis and pharmaceutical influence





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