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In this long-awaited follow-up to the bestselling Love's Executioner, master psycho-therapist Irvin Yalom once again probes the mysteries and marvels at the heart of the therapeutic encounter.
As the public grows disillusioned
with therapeutic quick fixes, people are looking
for a deeper psychotherapeutic experience
to make life more meaningful and satisfying. What really
happens in therapy? What promises and perils
does it hold for them?
No one writes about therapyor
indeed the dilemmas of the human conditionwith
more acuity, style,
and heart than Irvin Yalom. Here
he combines the storytelling skills so widely
praised in Love's Executioner with
the wisdom of the compassionate and fully
engaged psychotherapist.
In these six compelling tales of therapy, Yalom introduces
us to an unforgettable cast of
characters-Paula, who faces death and
stares it down; Magnolia, into whose
ample lap Yalom longs to
pour his own sorrows; Irene, who
learns to seek out anger and
plunge into it. And there's Momma,
old-fashioned, ill-tempered, who drifts into
Yalom's dreams and tramples through
his thoughts. At once wildly
entertaining and deeply thoughtful, Momma
and the Meaning of Life is
a work of rare insight and imagination.
Copyright © 1999 by Basic Books, Inc.
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