Longlisted for the Guardian first book award, a Sunday Times bestseller and Radio 4 Book of the Week. 'Marvellous' (The Times), 'Excellent' (Guardian), 'Completely magical' (Mail on Sunday)
Stephen Grosz is a practicing psychoanalyst - he has worked with
patients for more than twenty-five years. Born in America, he was
educated at the University of California, Berkeley, and at Oxford
University, and now lives in London. The Examined Life has been
translated into more than twenty languages and was longlisted for
the Guardian First Book Award.
www.stephengrosz.com
I was enthralled… profound and moving, packed large ideas into a
slim volume
*Observer Books of the Year*
With deceptive simplicity and gentle wisdom, Grosz teases out a
lesson or chases down a fugitive insight. I have distrusted
psychoanalysis for years, but I would leap onto Grosz’s couch
*The Sunday Times Books of the Year*
This moving book of patient portraits by the psychoanalyst Stephen
Grosz will make the reader think of Freud’s keenly observed and
literary-minded case studies. Writing with sympathy and insight, Mr
Grosz distils 25 years of work into a series of slim, piercing
chapters that read like a combination of Chekhov and Oliver
Sacks
*New York Times*
The success of The Examined Life by the psychoanalyst Stephen Grosz
has, I think, relatively little to do with his clinical know-how;
it rests, as Freud's did, on his story-telling abilities
*Observer*
Grosz is a superb storyteller and tells lots of his patients'
stories with sensitivity, but also with great acuity. You might
keep thinking you recognise things about people you know
*Evening Standard*
A wonderful example of a book that provides a safe space that can
be used as a base to explore the less safe
*Guardian*
Riveting... Grosz is adept at uncovering the little lies we tell
ourselves and he's very perceptive about the potentially positive
effects of bad experiences
*Daily Telegraph*
Because of [Grosz's] skill at getting to the heart of the matter,
we forget the distance separating us and become quickly involved in
the lives of those he discusses
*Mail on Sunday*
Absolutely fascinating. You’ll be amateur psychoanalysing yourself
and everyone you know
*Independent on Sunday*
It made me stop and think, and it has stayed with me. Grosz is a
superb storyteller and tells lots of his patients' stories with
sensitivity, but also with great acuity. You might keep thinking
you recognise things about people you know
*Scotsman*
I was enthralled... profound and moving, packed large ideas into a
slim volume -- Lucy Lethbridge * Observer Books of the Year *
With deceptive simplicity and gentle wisdom, Grosz teases out a
lesson or chases down a fugitive insight. I have distrusted
psychoanalysis for years, but I would leap onto Grosz's couch --
James McConnachie * The Sunday Times Books of the Year *
This moving book of patient portraits by the psychoanalyst Stephen
Grosz will make the reader think of Freud's keenly observed and
literary-minded case studies. Writing with sympathy and insight, Mr
Grosz distils 25 years of work into a series of slim, piercing
chapters that read like a combination of Chekhov and Oliver Sacks
-- Michiko Kakutani * New York Times *
The success of The Examined Life by the psychoanalyst
Stephen Grosz has, I think, relatively little to do with his
clinical know-how; it rests, as Freud's did, on his story-telling
abilities -- Rachel Cooke * Observer *
Grosz is a superb storyteller and tells lots of his patients'
stories with sensitivity, but also with great acuity. You might
keep thinking you recognise things about people you know -- William
Leith * Evening Standard *
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