Books
If you’ve connected with the writing on None For Me and want to go a little deeper, these books expand on many of the same themes explored here: addiction, identity, shame, recovery, faith, and the slow work of building a different life.
I don’t really think of these as self-help books. They’re more like companions for different seasons of the same journey. Some are more reflective. Some are more practical. Some are rooted more directly in faith. But all of them were written from lived experience, not theory.
None of these books were created to sit untouched on a shelf. They’re meant to be underlined, revisited, written in, and carried through the parts of life where things feel unclear, heavy, or in transition.
None For Me (Coming Soon!)
A deeper exploration of what it means to stop negotiating with alcohol, especially when your life still appears functional from the outside. Written for high-functioning people who are exhausted by the mental argument around drinking and are looking for a quieter, more honest way forward.
The View from a Windowless Basement
Part memoir, part recovery field guide, this book was written for the skeptics, introverts, relapsers, and people who never fully felt at home in traditional recovery culture. It explores addiction, identity, neuroscience, shame, and the possibility that recovery is not one road, but a menu of paths that need to fit the person walking them.
The View from a Windowless Basement Journal
A guided companion journal designed to help readers move the ideas from The View from a Windowless Basement into daily practice through reflection prompts, exercises, and personal writing.
From the Well
A Christ-centered book on addiction, recovery, grace, and renewal rooted in the story of the woman at the well in John 4. Rather than approaching sobriety as behavior management alone, From the Well explores addiction as a form of spiritual thirst and recovery as a deeper process of healing, identity, compassion, and transformation through Christ. It’s written for people struggling with addiction, people already sober but still searching for peace, and anyone trying to understand how faith and recovery intersect.




