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Biography - Social Scientists and Psychologists books

Posted in Biography (Monday, October 13, 2008)

Written by Haddon Jr Klingberg. By Doubleday. The regular list price is $23.95. Sells new for $9.95. There are some available for $2.19.
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5 comments about When Life Calls Out to Us: The Love and Lifework of Viktor and Elly Frankl.

  1. I was only slightly familiar with Viktor Frankl prior to reading this book. I read a short review in the Pietesten and it sparked my interest and prompted me to buy it. I recently lost my father and somehow this book has helped me in the healing process. It is written with such respect yet objectivity that you feel the Frankls are your neighbors. I recommend this book for people who enjoy reading about the personal aspects of celebrity. I use celebrity in the most respectful terms of Dr. Frankl and his wife Elly. Their lives will inspire you and prompt you to want to learn more about Dr. Frankl's teachings and writings.


  2. It is now 14 years since Haddon Klingberg hosted Viktor Frankl and his wife Elly in Chicago, and was asked by the couple to write their personal story. He accepted the challenge and gave seven years to faithfully researching and recording a remarkable love story, interwoven with the professional accomplishments of one of the towering figures in 20th century psychiatric practice. Klingberg's foreward, introduction and first chapters give a comprehensive overview of the European psychiatric landscape into which Dr. Frankl emerged and upon which he left his indelible mark, after years of incarceration in Nazi concentration camps.
    Frankl's logotherapy, which shone a light in my own life forty-three years ago, becomes more than an inspiring theory in author Klingberg's hands. Logotherapy's founder is enfleshed with a genuine humanity of weaknesses and flaws as well as the ideal of self-transcendence to which the noted physician aspired. I learned, and I laughed and cried alternately in this wonderful read. I'll never be the same after being led by the author into the private lives of the two remarkable Frankls.


  3. As one of Dr. Frankl's medical students at the Poliklinik in 1948 I found this book of great interest. It is well written and detailed. Although I had always admired Frankl for not falling victim to hate after his concentration camp experiences I was unaware of the profound influence his second wife Elly (the first wife,Tilly, died in Bergen-Belsen) had in his recovery from the tragedies and the help she had given him in the propagation of logotherapy.
    Anyone who is familiar with some of Frankl's book will enjoy reading about the fascinating and colorful personal lives of these two truly extraordinary people. Dr. Klingberg is to be congratulated for his efforts in making them available to us.


  4. This history of Frankl's life, thoughtfully and respectfully told, provides much of the context which breathed even more life into Frankl's work for me.


  5. I odered this book a LONG time ago from one of the used Book Dealers.


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Posted in Biography (Monday, October 13, 2008)

Written by Paul Roazen. By Transaction Publishers. The regular list price is $34.95. Sells new for $34.94. There are some available for $54.23.
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1 comments about Edoardo Weiss: The House that Freud Built.

  1. Edoardo Weiss: The House that Freud Built is the biography of Edoardo Weiss (1889-1970), a favored disciple of Freud and the acknowledged founder of psychoanalysis in Italy. Drawing heavily on interviews that author and professor Paul Roazen personally conducted with Weiss, Edoardo Weiss: The House that Freud Built covers political issues (including the difficulties of accomplishing pioneer psychological work under the government of Mussolini), moral principles in the clinic, Weiss' and Freud's differences of opinion in how to best work with psychotic patients, and much more. An index rounds out this aptly researched biography, which due to its focus on Weiss' achievements in psychoanalysis is an especially vital contribution to personal and library psychology history shelves.


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Posted in Biography (Monday, October 13, 2008)

Written by David Loye. By Benjamin Franklin Press. The regular list price is $18.95. Sells new for $11.84. There are some available for $10.99.
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No comments about 3,000 Years of Love.




Posted in Biography (Monday, October 13, 2008)

Written by Rosalba Carrillo Fuentes. By Tomo. Sells new for $4.95.
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No comments about Sigmund Freud.




Posted in Biography (Monday, October 13, 2008)

Written by E. LeMay and J. Pitts and P. Gordon. By Errepar. The regular list price is $11.95. Sells new for $24.89. There are some available for $24.89.
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No comments about Heidegger para principiantes.




Posted in Biography (Monday, October 13, 2008)

Written by Bryher. By Paris Press. The regular list price is $19.95. Sells new for $11.91. There are some available for $3.86.
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3 comments about The Heart to Artemis: A Writer's Memoirs.

  1. I love reading this book, but reader beware - Bryher frequently talks about the influence of "Henry" on her reading life. Actually that would be "Henty", as in G. A. Henty. I can't believe the editing staff made such a huge error! Don't let this stop you from reading this fine memoir.


  2. Her family had heaps of money, and some said her father was the richest man in England, though this is not immediately apparent in Bryher's account of her midddle-class childhood and upbringing. Money couldn't save her from the old ennui, however, and she soon found, at age four, that the world seemed more real in books--books like her early favorite, Johann Wyss' SWISS FAMILY ROBINSON, with its Romantic reimagining of the nuclear family shipwrecked on a desert island yet still managing to maintain a happy structure. She was brought outside as a baby to watch the dark night sky light up for once during the diamond jubilee of Victoria. And yet she managed to throw herself into life and rubbing elbows with many of the modernist bigwigs, from Freud to Havelock Ellis. She married improvident men twice, and made her life with the poet H.D., who must have recently died when Bryher began her memoir, for much of the book's second half seems like an extended elegy to H.D.'s American elegance and sex appeal. For the times (first published in 1963) THE HEART TO ARTEMIS is surprisingly frank about the relationship between herself and H.D.

    The only weakness I see in the book is perhaps a fault only to the bourgeois; she literally tells about and neglects to show us--to use workshop jargon that she bwould have abhorred--how stifling it was to be a young woman in the pre-war period. It's funny because she makes so many other things vivid and alive; the book is filled with specific smells, noises, colors and the feel of fabric. But the utter restraint she so often moans about, and probably to good reason, remains uninhabited. Perhaps that's tied up with what it was: an absence. She has one funny part where she describes how even landscape gardening had its strict codes, and one of them was the absolute insistence on decoration, what would strike us now as an absurd number of plantings. "Everything at that time had to curl," she writes. "There ought to be some special term to describe the horror a blank space evoked in 1900."

    Those of you puzzled by the title will find an explanation on page 111 in which, at age nine, she gave her heart to Artemis, her body to exploration. Social restrictions irked her; she despaired of succeeding as a novelist, for example, because "social taboos have cut me off from much of the material that I should have liked to use." She cites the case of a lumberman whose earthy chitchat she will never be able to overhear unguarded. At the same time, she is almost mystic about the power of the artist. "I have a profound contempt for the writer who speaks of making his work intelligible to the masses," she says. "He is not serving them but betraying their trust. Our job is to feel the movement of time as its direction is about to change and there can be no reward but the vision itself. It is natural that we should be both disliked and ignored."


  3. I was interested in reading The Heart to Artemis because I heard that Bryher was interested in psychoanalysis, and that she knew Freud. What an amazing life she led! And what a great writer she is. This memoir is unlike any I have ever read. Bryher vividly writes about her experience with Freud (who only wanted to talk about Bryher's experience flying in an airplane). And she writes about her relationship with H.D. She describes her Victorian childhood - the severe restrictions and expectations imposed on her, as well as the extensive travels with her unmarried parents and her first camel ride. I was intrigued that Bryher knew personally so many of the writers I've long admired: Hemingway, Gertrude Stein, and Marianne Moore. With all this socializing - I identified with her quiet reserve. She also describes so graphically the impact of WWI on the young and old and she observed the events leading up to WWII. Her emphasis on social responsibility seems most important to me. This is an amazing book that is interesting on many levels. I highly recommend it!


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Posted in Biography (Monday, October 13, 2008)

Written by Nance Vizedom. By Northwest Publishing. The regular list price is $7.95. Sells new for $145.82. There are some available for $1.99.
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No comments about Joined at the Heart.




Posted in Biography (Monday, October 13, 2008)

Written by Thomas Archer. By Kessinger Publishing, LLC. The regular list price is $49.95. Sells new for $33.22. There are some available for $36.11.
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No comments about William Ewart Gladstone And His Contemporaries: Fifty Years Of Social And Political Progress.




Posted in Biography (Monday, October 13, 2008)

Written by Hillman. By Routledge. The regular list price is $29.95. Sells new for $49.00. There are some available for $2.38.
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1 comments about FREUD'S OWN COOKBOOK.

  1. This unique cookbook is compiled from Freud's own recipes and comments. It is warm and fuzzy and highly amusing at times, and actually has great recipes. I have given three copies as gifts and they were well received.


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Posted in Biography (Monday, October 13, 2008)

Written by John Coles. By Giles de la Mare. The regular list price is $35.00. Sells new for $6.00. There are some available for $3.89.
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No comments about Blindness and the Visionary: The Life and Work of John Wilson.




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Last updated: Mon Oct 13 19:30:01 EDT 2008