Lori Gottlieb is a psychotherapist and New York Times bestselling author who writes the weekly Dear Therapist advice column for The Atlantic, where she is also a contributing editor. She has written for The New York Times Magazine and has appeared on Today, Good Morning America, CBS This Morning, CNN, and NPR. She lives in Los Angeles. Learn more at LoriGottlieb.com or by following her @LoriGottlieb1 on Twitter.
‘Absorbing and fascinating.’
*The Guardian*
‘This is a wonderful book … I wish I hadn’t finished reading it,
but will start from the beginning again happily.’
*Nigella Lawson*
‘Gottlieb has written a wise, funny, and sometimes blisteringly sad
book that is warmer than any self-help guide: one that feels like a
friend.’
*New Statesman*
‘Candid and deeply personal, this is a book about being both
patient and clinician, and one that offers hope to us all.’
*Stylist Magazine’s ‘Your Guide to 2019’s Best Non-Fiction
Books’*
‘In prose that’s conversational and funny yet deeply insightful,
psychologist Lori Gottlieb is here to remind us that our therapists
are people, too.’
*Refinery29*
‘In her memoir, bestselling author, columnist, and therapist Lori
Gottlieb explores her own issues — and discovers just how similar
they are to the problems of her clients.’
*Bustle*
‘Maybe You Should Talk to Someone is funny, hopeful, wise, and
engrossing — all at the same time. Lori Gottlieb takes us inside
the most intimate of encounters as both clinician and patient and
leaves us with a surprisingly fresh understanding of ourselves, one
another, and the human condition. This is a daring, delightful, and
transformative book.’
*Arianna Huffington, founder of Huffington Post and founder
& CEO of Thrive Global*
‘I’ve been reading books about psychotherapy for over a half
century, but never have I encountered a book like Maybe You Should
Talk to Someone: so bold and brassy, so packed with good stories,
so honest, deep, and riveting. I intended to read a chapter or two
but ended up reading and relishing every word.’
*Irvin Yalom MD, author of Love’s Executioner, and other Tales
of Psychotherapy, and professor emeritus of psychiatry at
Stanford University.*
‘If you have even an ounce of interest in the therapeutic process,
or in the conundrum of being human, you must read this book. It is
wise, warm, smart, and funny, and Lori Gottlieb is exceedingly good
company.’
*Susan Cain, New York Times bestselling author of
Quiet*
‘Shrinks, they’re just like us — at least in Maybe You Should Talk
to Someone, the heartfelt memoir by therapist Lori Gottlieb. Warm,
funny, and engaging (no poker-faced clinician here), Gottlieb not
only gives us an unvarnished look at her patients’ lives, but also
her own. The result is the most relatable portrait of a therapist
I’ve yet encountered.’
*Susannah Cahalan, New York Times bestselling author of
Brain on Fire*
‘Here are some people who might benefit from Lori Gottlieb’s
illuminating new book: Therapists, people who have been in therapy,
people who have been in relationships, people who have experienced
emotions. In other words, everyone. Lori’s story is funny,
enlightening, and radically honest. It merits far more than 50
minutes of your time.’
*A.J. Jacobs, New York Times bestselling author of The
Year of Living Biblically*
‘Maybe You Should Talk to Someone is ingenious, inspiring, tender,
and funny. Lori Gottlieb bravely takes her readers on a guided tour
into the self, showing us the therapeutic process from both sides
of the couch — as both therapist and patient. I cheered for her
breakthroughs, as if they were my own! This is the best book I've
ever read about the life-changing possibilities of talk
therapy.’
*Amy Dickinson, “Ask Amy” advice columnist and New York
Times bestselling author of Strangers Tend to Tell Me
Things*
‘This book is so insightful, and compassionate, and rich, and
taught me a lot about myself. I was sucked right in to these vivid,
funny, illuminating stories of humans trying to climb their way out
of hiding, overcome self-defeating habits, and wake up to their own
strength. Gottlieb has captured something profound about the
struggle, and the miracle, of human connection.’
*Sarah Hepola, New York Times bestselling author of
Blackout*
‘With wisdom and humanity, Lori Gottlieb invites us into her
consulting room, and her therapist’s. There, readers will share in
one of the best-kept secrets of being a clinician: when we bear
witness to change, we also change, and when we are present as
others find meaning in their lives, we also discover more in our
own.’
*Lisa Damour, PhD. New York Times bestselling author of
Untangled*
‘Some people are great writers, and other people are great
therapists. Lori Gottlieb is, astoundingly, both. Maybe You Should
Talk to Someone is about the wonder of being human: how none of us
is immune from struggle, and how we can grow into ourselves and
escape our emotional prisons. Rarely have I read a book that
challenged me to see myself in an entirely new light, and was at
the same time laugh-out-loud funny and utterly absorbing.’
*Katie Couric, award-winning journalist and New York Times
bestselling author of The Best Advice I Ever Got*
‘Gottlieb is an utterly compelling narrator: funny, probing, savvy,
vulnerable. She pays attention to the small stuff — the box of
tissues and the Legos in the carpet — as she honours the more
expansive mysteries of our wild, aching hearts.’
*Leslie Jamison, author of The Recovering: intoxication and its
aftermath*
‘Saturated with self-awareness and compassion, this is an
irresistibly addictive tour of the human condition.’ STARRED
REVIEW
*Kirkus*
‘Gottlieb finds herself learning powerful lessons from her patients
as they untangle their emotional challenges while learning to
understand her own self-image and what it genuinely means to be
human ... Written with grace, humor, wisdom, and compassion, this
heartwarming journey of self-discovery should appeal to fans of
Mitch Albom and Nicholas Sparks.’
*Library Journal*
‘Therapists play a special and invaluable role in the lives of the
30 million Americans who attend sessions, but have you ever
wondered where they go when they need to talk to someone? Veteran
psychotherapist and New York Times best-selling author Lori
Gottlieb shares a candid and remarkably relatable account of what
it means to be a therapist who also goes to therapy, and what this
can teach us about the universality of our questions and
anxieties.’
*Thrive Global, ‘10 Books We Can’t Wait to Read in 2019’*
‘A dishy romp, an eavesdropper’s guilty pleasure … provocative and
entertaining … Gottlieb gives us more than a voyeuristic look at
other people’s problems (including her own). She shows us the value
of therapy.’
*The Washington Post*
‘What makes this book a joy to read is that it offers a wise and
witty meld of the author’s personal insights and clinical
observations plus bite-sized nuggets of psychology without ever
lecturing or boring the reader ... For those who are skeptical,
fearful or turned off by the idea of the talking cure, this
fly-on-the-wall view of the subject just might convince you that
therapy is remarkably worthwhile ... For self-help aficionados,
there is wisdom galore on topics such as the drivers and inhibitors
of psychological transformation, managing loss and grief,
discovering meaning in life and work ... And for therapists, there
is the chance to sit back and take note of how another clinician
applies her skills to conjure up the magic of effective therapy ...
A talented and highly accomplished writer, Gottlieb’s insecurities
and chronic internal conflicts may surprise some readers. The fact
that she doesn’t hold back talking about her suffering is what
makes this book so powerful ... a most satisfying and illuminating
read for psychotherapy patients, their therapists, and all the rest
of us.’
*New York Journal of Books*
‘An irresistibly candid and addicting memoir ... [Gottlieb’s] book
does feel deeply, almost creepily, voyeuristic ... In showing us
how patients reveal just a part of their selves, [Gottlieb] gives
us a dizzily satisfying collage of narratives, a kind of ensemble
soap opera set in the already soap operatic world of Los Angeles
... Gottlieb can be judgmental and obsessive, but she’s authentic,
even raw, about herself and her patients.’
*The New York Times Book Review*
‘She combines journalism and therapy, most notably in her “Dear
Therapist” advice column for the Atlantic, which itself somewhat
makes the argument for therapy based on the fact that the questions
are often far too complicated ever to be answered in the span of
one response, though Gottlieb does her best ... There’s something
satisfyingly voyeuristic and intimate about getting to listen in on
anyone else’s therapy, a feeling Gottlieb amplifies by
contextualising what is actually happening in each session from a
more clinical perspective. She does this by gently and constantly
explaining to the reader what exactly therapists are trying to do
with their patients, sharing language and frameworks ... It’s
strange to see Gottlieb, a therapist herself, seemingly imply that
someone can be too ‘together’ to benefit from talking to someone.
And yet, I’m glad she grapples with this. Watching her come to the
realisation that the process has things to offer her beyond a quick
solution is a lesson in and of itself.’
*Slate*
‘As Gottlieb’s patients proceed (often painfully) through their
sessions, so does Gottlieb with her new therapist, Wendell. And we
get to listen in through this unusual combination of memoir,
self-help guide and therapy primer ... warm, approachable, and
funny — a pleasure to read ... As we watch Gottlieb and her
patients learn to tell the rest of their own stories and move
beyond their pain, we find some surprising insights and even a bit
of wisdom.’
*Bookpage*
‘Gottlieb plunges further into the psychological depths as she
discloses how therapists keep each other honest ... Some readers
will know Gottlieb from her many TV appearances or her “Dear
Therapist” column, but even for the uninitiated-to-Gottlieb, it
won’t take long to settle in with this compelling read.’
*Booklist*
‘An addictive book that’s part Oliver Sacks and part Nora Ephron.
Prepare to be riveted.’
*People Magazine, Book of the Week*
‘Reading it is like one long therapy session — and may be the
gentle nudge you need to start seeing a therapist again IRL.’
*Hello Giggles*
‘With startling wisdom and humour, Gottlieb invites us into her
world as both clinician and patient, examining the truths and
fictions we tell ourselves and others ... Maybe You Should Talk To
Someone is revolutionary in its candour, offering a deeply personal
yet universal tour of our hearts and minds and providing the rarest
of gifts: a boldly revealing portrait of what it means to be human,
and a disarmingly funny and illuminating account of our own
mysterious lives and our power to transform them.’
*Bookreporter*
‘A psychotherapist and advice columnist at The Atlantic shows us
what it’s like to be on both sides of the couch with doses of
heartwarming humour and invaluable, tell-it-like-it-is wisdom.’
*O, The Oprah Magazine*
‘Entirely reframes the way we think about psychotherapy … Movingly
depicts our collective longing for lasting connection.’
*Entertainment Weekly*
‘A delightful, fascinating dive into human behavior and
idiosyncrasies, habits, and defenses, fears and blind spots: hers,
her patients’, yours, and mine.’
*Chicago Tribune*
‘This relatable memoir reminds us that many of our struggles are
universal and just plain human.’
*Real Simple*
‘A no-holds-barred look at how therapy works.’
*Parade*
‘A fascinating, funny behind-the-scenes look at what happens when
people — even shrinks themselves — ‘break open,’ with the help of a
therapist.’
*Shondaland*
‘Who could resist watching a therapist grapple with the same
questions her patients have been asking her for years? Gottlieb,
who writes the Atlantic’s “Dear Therapist” column, brings searing
honesty to her search for answers.’
*The Washington Post, The 10 books to read in April*
‘[Maybe You Should Talk to Someone] explores the ups and downs of
life with humour and grace.’
*BookBub*
‘Charmingly readable.’
*In The Moment*
‘In her compassionate and emotionally generous new book, Gottlieb …
pulls back the curtain of a therapist’s world … The result is a
humane and empathetic exploration of six disparate characters
struggling to take control of their lives as they journey back to
happiness.’
*ALA’s Public Libraries Online*
‘[A] smart, hilarious, insightful book. Lori Gottlieb will have you
laughing and crying as she breaks down the problems of her
patients, her therapist, and herself.’
*Patch.com*
‘Both poignant and laugh-out-loud funny, [Gottlieb] reveals how our
stories form the core of our lives.’
*Orange County Register*
‘Reads like a novel and reveals what really happens on both sides
of the couch.’
*Men’s Health*
‘A hugely entertaining memoir about a therapist in therapy.’
*Sunday Age*
‘A rare and candid insight into a profession that is conventionally
bound with rules and secrecy. Told with charm and compassion,
vulnerability and humour, it’s also the story of an incredible
relationship between two therapists and a disarmingly funny and
illuminating account of our own mysterious inner lives, as well as
our power to transform them.’
*Sunraysia Daily*
’Heartwarming and upbeat, this memoir demystifies therapy and
celebrates the human spirit.’
*Shelf Awareness*
‘A sparkling and sometimes moving account of her work as a
psychotherapist, with the twist that she is in therapy herself ...
For someone considering but hesitant to enter therapy, Gottlieb’s
thoughtful and compassionate work will calm anxieties about the
process; for experienced therapists, it will provide an abundance
of insights into their own work.’
*Publishers Weekly*
‘A source of inspiration.’
*Yahoo Finance*
‘A great read for anyone interested in mental health, humanity, and
empathy.’
*Mirage News*
‘It‘s incredibly open, honest, and there are insights Gottlieb
comes to acknowledge in the pages that will resonate with you
deeply.’
*GQ*
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