‘what Your Teen is trying to tell you’

 My new book is now available to order NOW in a number of bookshops. See links below

Amazon.co.uk - click link here

Easons.com - click link here

Bookstation.ie - click link here

Kennys.ie - click link here

(*an independent book seller, who will ship overseas)

Bookdepository.com - click link here

Click link here to get all the details of where to buy my new book

‘Stella O’Malley’s bible for parents raising troubled teenagers’
— The Sunday Times

Book Interviews/Book Reviews:

06/06/2023, The New Flesh Podcast: What your teen is trying to tell you

05/06/2023, Fred Pawle, AHD: Stella O’Malley on Fred Pawle

29/04/2023, Spiked-online: ‘The tyranny of parenting experts’

27/04/2023, Sunday Business Post: Pychotherapist Stella O’Malley is clear sighted ally for parents at teenage ground zero’

23/03/2023, Grazia Daily: ‘An Expert’s Top Tips For Dealing With Teenagers’

19/04/2023, Irish Independent: The ‘Teen Whisper’ on what your teen is trying to tell you

17/04/2023, the Unspeakable Podcast: ‘Does Your Kid Really Need Therapy? Stella O’Malley on Teens, Mental Health, and the Problem With Professionals’

17/04/2023, RTE.ie: Psychotherapist Stella O'Malley chats to Miriam about her book, 'What Your Teen Is Trying to Tell You.'

08/04/2023, Sarah Vine’s Femail Half-Hour: Talking about teenagers with Stella O’Malley’

06/04/2023, The Real Health Podcast, ‘Talking to teenagers and what parents really need to know’ or watch here.

02/04/2023, Sunday Independent; ‘Definitive Guide for parents on how to help teenagers navigate life’s challenges’

02/04/2023, RTE Radio 1 with Miriam O’Callaghan; What Your Teen Is Trying To Tell You

02/04/2023, Interview with the famous artist Birdy Rose; ‘What your teen is trying to tell you'

27/03/2023, Midlands 103; Parents Hold The Key For Dealing With Children's Anti-Social Behaviour

27/03/2023, Graziadaily.co.uk; ‘How to handle your adolescent's feelings and help them negotiate the rocky road to adulthood’

24/03/2023, Belfast Telegraph: Psychotherapist Stella O’Malley’s advice on handling tricky teen situations’

22/02/2023, Pat Kenny Show, Newstalk; Book: What Your Teenagers Trying To Tell You’

21/03/2023, Off-Air with Jane & Fi, theTimes.co.uk: ‘We have to keep the veneer off showbiz’

20/03/2023, iNews: ‘How to deal with nightmare kids – from a former wild teenager’

19/03/2023, Sunday Times: ‘Stella O’Malley’s bible for parents raising troubled teenagers’

19/03/2023, Irish Independent: Trust yourself: How to help a teenager navigate social media, friendship, anxiety and romance’

MEDIA REVIEWS

'Stella O'Malley is the voice of compassion and reason needed by anyone helping a child to navigate the rocky teenage years. This invaluable book is packed with wise advice and evidence-based hints and tips, organised by theme for ease of reference. A book you'll turn to again and again' - Helen Joyce

'Parenting teenagers has never been harder: Stella O'Malley offers parents a humane, loving template for navigating the storm. Encouraging parents to be confident with their boundaries, but also generous with their patience and affection, this book shows that you can be good enough - and its practical good sense will help you to achieve just that' - Sarah Ditum

'A warm, wise, and compassionate voice that will reassure any parent struggling with the teen in their life' - Kathleen Stock, author of Material Girls

'An essential parenting manual for complex times. Utterly brilliant - Stella's voice is reassuring and she covers absolutely everything. Every parent of teens needs this book. A much-needed book for a generation of children under pressure, and the parents who love them' - Milli Hill, Author of The Positive Birth Book

'Written with compassion and clarity, this is a reassuringly practical guide to the art of parenting teens through the tricky times' - Rachel Rooney, children's author and poet

'This is the most readable and practical guide to parenting a teenager imaginable ... It's directly relevant to contemporary teen culture, with its hazards of accessible hard porn and bullying by social media, as well as the apparent paradox of a more liberal cultural approach to sexuality combined with teens still experiencing deep shame and being fearful of growing up ... this is also a book to read if you are still in need of learning forgiveness toward and understanding of your own inner teen. Stella O'Malley writes beautifully in a frank and straightforward fashion. I would recommend it to every parent, as well as to teenagers themselves' - Victoria Whitworth, author of Swimming with Seals

'A much needed guide for parents to navigate through the perils and the unknowns of adolescence ... The author brilliantly exposes the diverse problematics that teens can encounter and she offers parents with guidance and support, in a very pragmatic way. I found particularly insightful the chapter on gender identity and gender dysphoria, that sheds a light into what might be a traumatic phase for many adolescents who struggle to accept themselves ... What Your Teen is Trying to Tell You sheds a light into one of the most difficult phases of human development, if not the most difficult. Any parent should read this book and keep it close, in case they'll need to read it twice' - Paola Diana, Author, Entrepreneur & Podcast Host

'What Your Teen is Trying to Tell You reminds parents that they themselves can have much more impact than they realize. This advice is much needed in a world where it's arguably harder than ever to be a teen, with online pressures, unprecedented levels of isolation and loneliness, and the resulting sense of parental futility. Using well-known principles of psychological understanding and age-old wisdom, O'Malley invites parents to lean into the opportunity to be a more confident and competent parent and help their children to truly thrive' - Sasha Ayad, licensed counsellor

'I liked the bits I read because you can tell Stella O'Malley really LIKES young people, which you don't see very often. I especially liked the section on perfectionism and fear of failure, and it helped me understand why I worry about letting people down. I feel we are all being pressured into growing up too quickly, and I think this book gives me support in helping to pushback against peer pressure and to say when something is making me unhappy, and to say WHY, when before I didn't really understand why' - Teen (15)