How Does That Make You Feel?: True Confessions from Both Sides of the Therapy Couch
Sherry Amatenstein
(Author)
Description
How Does That Make You Feel? obliterates the boundaries between the shrink and the one being shrunk with unabashedly candid writers breaking confidentiality and telling all about their experiences in therapy. This revelatory, no-punches-pulled book brings to light both sides of the "relationship" between therapist and client--a bond that can feel pure and profound, even if it is, at times, illusory. Contributors include an array of essayists, authors, TV/film writers and therapists, including Patti Davis, Beverly Donofrio, Royal Young, Molly Peacock, Susan Shapiro, Charlie Rubin, Estelle Erasmus, and Dennis Palumbo. Full list of contributors: Sherry AmatensteinLaura Bogart
Martha Crawford
Patti Davis
Megan Devine
Beverly Donofrio
Janice Eidus
Estelle Erasmus
Juli Fraga
Nina Gaby
Mindy Greenstein
Jenine Holmes
Diane Josefowicz
Jean Kim
Amy Klein
Binnie Klein
Anna March
Allison McCarthy
Kurt Nemes
Dennis Palumbo
Molly Peacock
Pamela Rafalow Grossman
Charlie Rubin
Jonathan Schiff
Barbara Schoichet
Adam Sexton
Susan Shapiro
Beth Sloan
Eve Tate
Kate Walter
Priscilla Warner
Linda Yellin
Royal Young
Jessica Zucker
Product Details
Price
$17.00
$15.81
Publisher
Seal Press (CA)
Publish Date
September 13, 2016
Pages
320
Dimensions
5.4 X 0.9 X 8.1 inches | 0.7 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9781580056243
BISAC Categories:
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About the Author
Sherry Amatenstein is a therapist and the author of The Q&A Dating Book: Love Lessons from Bad Breakups and The Complete Marriage Counselor: Relationship-Saving Advice from America's Top 50+ Couples Therapists. Amatenstein is an adjunct writing professor at the New School and NYU, and a former editor at Hearst and ivillage.com. Her writing has appeared in publications like Marie Claire, and she has offered relationship advice on Today, Early Show, HuffPost Live, NPR, and more.
Reviews
"Funny, smart, frustrating, heartbreaking, but above all honesttrue tales of that most private of relationship between therapist and client. Told from both sides of the couch, but always from the heart."
Judith Sills, author of The Comfort Trap
"This book is as engrossing and illuminating as a volume of good short stories. It explores the hidden, fascinating nooks, crannies, and complications of the complex relationship between therapist and patient, a subject that turns out to be endlessly fascinating. One feels the presence of Amatenstein's humane, sensitive, and experienced hand in a collection that is wide-ranging and comprehensive in it's range of issues. Many talented writers on view. Many thought-provoking moments. You don't have to have been on the couch to enjoy this book. All that is necessary is an interest in people and the struggles of modern life.
George Hodgman, bestselling author of Bettyville
"These searingly honest essays brilliantly capture the uniquely complicated relationships that therapists and patients share in the course of trying to navigate our lives. If you've ever revealed your most private hopes, dreams, fears, and longings with a stranger in a high-backed chairor been that stranger in a high-backed chairyou'll be so engrossed by these stories that you may end up skipping your session.
Lori Gottleib, bestselling author of Marry Him
"With rapier wit and a big dose of humanity, Sherry Amatenstein and the amazing writers she has assembled ask us to look at ourselves. And I think we ll be better for it.
Jenny Lumet, actress and award-winning screenwriter of Rachel Getting Married
"How Does That Make You Feel is an eye-opening look at therapy. With essays ranging from the profoundly emotional to the downright hilarious, we can all learn something about a relationship so many of us hold dear, that between a therapist and their patient. Invaluable insight that will undoubtedly foster better understanding all around."
Mara Schiavocampo
As a person who's been through therapyand both loved, and hated, and then loved and hated it againthis book speaks to the experience on the couch unlike anything I've ever read, and reading it has given me not only a better understanding of the therapeutic process, but also a better understanding of myself.
Kevin McEnroe, author of Our Town
"
Judith Sills, author of The Comfort Trap
"This book is as engrossing and illuminating as a volume of good short stories. It explores the hidden, fascinating nooks, crannies, and complications of the complex relationship between therapist and patient, a subject that turns out to be endlessly fascinating. One feels the presence of Amatenstein's humane, sensitive, and experienced hand in a collection that is wide-ranging and comprehensive in it's range of issues. Many talented writers on view. Many thought-provoking moments. You don't have to have been on the couch to enjoy this book. All that is necessary is an interest in people and the struggles of modern life.
George Hodgman, bestselling author of Bettyville
"These searingly honest essays brilliantly capture the uniquely complicated relationships that therapists and patients share in the course of trying to navigate our lives. If you've ever revealed your most private hopes, dreams, fears, and longings with a stranger in a high-backed chairor been that stranger in a high-backed chairyou'll be so engrossed by these stories that you may end up skipping your session.
Lori Gottleib, bestselling author of Marry Him
"With rapier wit and a big dose of humanity, Sherry Amatenstein and the amazing writers she has assembled ask us to look at ourselves. And I think we ll be better for it.
Jenny Lumet, actress and award-winning screenwriter of Rachel Getting Married
"How Does That Make You Feel is an eye-opening look at therapy. With essays ranging from the profoundly emotional to the downright hilarious, we can all learn something about a relationship so many of us hold dear, that between a therapist and their patient. Invaluable insight that will undoubtedly foster better understanding all around."
Mara Schiavocampo
As a person who's been through therapyand both loved, and hated, and then loved and hated it againthis book speaks to the experience on the couch unlike anything I've ever read, and reading it has given me not only a better understanding of the therapeutic process, but also a better understanding of myself.
Kevin McEnroe, author of Our Town
"