Six long psychotherapy narrativesfour based
on actual cases, two fictionalthat comprise
a worthy sequel to the authors
bestselling Loves Executioner:
And Other Tales of Psychotherapy (1989).
Yalom, author of many other books on psychotherapy,
focuses here on how life can be
enriched by emotionally integrating close encounters
with loved ones deaths and
with ones own mortality. What particularly makes
this book worth many times its price is a
stunning piece entitled Seven Advanced
Lessions in the Therapy of Grief. Here Yalom
captures seven years of work with the emotionally
frozen if often acerbic Irene, who during
adolescence lost a beloved brother
in a car accident and is about
to lose her husband to brain cancer. He
vividly describes such therapeutic concepts as
rage grief, the way in which a
bereaved person often feels an acutely heightened
sense of his or her mortality,
and how flashes of intense anger between
patient and therapist can paradoxically strengthen
the bond between them. In all these pieces,
Yalom also illustrates his approach of actively
exploring the here and now,
or in-session emotional dynamics, even when
this involves either side expressing
particularly erotic, hostile, or other charged
feelings.
Yalom...again displays the great
narrative drive and wit evident in Loves
Executioner. At least as much as
that book, Momma and the Meaning of
Life contains some truly profound
observations on death, the sometimes desperate
attempts to modify ones personality
so as to live more fully, and
other human struggles.
These six engrossing narratives are
very valuable gleanings from a master
therapists professional and personal experience.
Copyright © 1999 by Kirkus Reviews. Used by permission
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