Why was Saul tormented by three unopened letters from Stockholm? What made Thelma spend her whole life raking over a long-past love affair? How did Carlos' macho fantasies help him deal with terminal cancer?
Irvin D. Yalom is Professor Emeritus of Psychiatry at the Stanford University School of Medicine. As well as an award-winning psychiatrist and psychotherapist, he is an extremely prolific author. His many other works include The Gift of Therapy, Staring at the Sun, When Nietzsche Wept, The Theory and Practice of Group Psychiatry, The Schopenhauer Cure, Lying on the Couch, Momma and the Meaning of Life, Existential Psychotherapy, I'm Calling the Police, Inpatient Group Psychotherapy, Every Day Gets a Little Closer and The Spinoza Problem.
Dr Yalom demonstrates once again that in the right hands, the stuff
of therapy has the interest of the richest and most inventive
fiction
*New York Times*
These remarkably moving and instructive tales of the psychiatric
encounter bring the reader into novel territories of the mind - and
the landscape is truly unforgettable
*Maggie Scarf*
Love's Executioner is one of those rare books that suggests both
the mystery and the poetry of the psychotherapeutic process. The
best therapists are at least partly poets. With this riveting and
beautifully written book, Irvin Yalom has joined their ranks
*Erica Jong*
Inspired ... He writes with the narrative wit of O. Henry and the
earthy humor of Isaac Bashevis Singer
*San Francisco Chronicle*
Dr Yalom offers a valuable insight into the delicate process of
therapy
*Sunday Telegraph*
Irvin Yalom writes like an angel about the devils that besiege
us
*Rollo May*
These stories are wonderful. They make us realize that within every
human being lie the pain and the beauty that make life
worthwhile
*Bernie S. Siegel*
Dr Yalom is unusually honest, both with his patients and about
himself
*Anthony Storr*
Yalom is a gifted storyteller, and from the sound of these tales, a
no-less-gifted psychotherapist
*Los Angeles Times*
This is an impressive transformation of clinical experience into
literature. Dr Yalom's case histories are more gripping than 98
percent of the fiction published today, and he has gone to amazing
lengths of honesty to depict himself as a realistic flesh-and-blood
character: funny, flawed, perverse, and, above all,
understanding
*Phillip Lopate*
I loved Love's Executioner. Dr Yalom has learned something that
fiction writers learned years ago - that people's mistakes are a
lot more interesting than their triumphs
*Joanne Greenberg*
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