I first became interested in this book when I read Donny Osmond's 1999 autobiography Life is Just What You Make It: My Life So Far. Donny was candid enough to share his experience with panic attacks that popped up inexplicably during his long run of playing the lead in Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat. He explained how reading Triumph Over Fear as well as one-on-one therapy sessions with author Dr. Jerilyn Ross helped him overcome his problem and go on performing. This book is really geared to people like Donny, who had to cope with very serious fears. Dr. Ross describes patients and recovery histories not only for people who experience panic attacks, but also those with agoraphobia, social phobia, obsessive-compulsive disorder and post-raumatic stress disorder. Nevertheless, her suggestions are useful for those of us with less frequent, less threatening, but still troubling, anxieties that pop up from time to time. She bases her therapy on six basic points that make an individual stop, think, analyze, and be aware of fear patterns and how to cope with them. Her first point, "Expect, allow and accept that fear will rise" is a great beginner for recovery because it urges us to stop fearing fear itself. Her subsequent points help people develop the ability to function with fear instead of being paralyzed by it, and to stop worrying about all the "what-if's" that hardly ever happen anyway. Other chapters describe techniques such as relaxation, exercise, and breathing control that are useful for dispatching major or minor bouts of fear. This is a nice manual to keep on hand to remind us that panic and fear are manageable when they arise, and can ultimately be conquered or at least greatly lessened to the point that we can feel normal, strong, and ready to cope with nearly anything.