The Developmental Lens by Gwyneth Kerr Erwin, Ph.D., Psy.D. from IPBooks

Click Here to Purchase: The Developmental Lens by Gwyneth Kerr Erwin, Ph.D., Psy.D.

Advance Praise for The Developmental Lens: A New Paradigm for Psychodynamic Diagnosis and Treatment by Gwyneth Kerr Erwin, Ph.D., Psy.D.

In the nearly thirty years I’ve known her, Dr. Gwyn Erwin’s passion has been to formulate, teach, and integrate contemporary relational psychoanalytic thinking, infant (and adult) development, and caring and effective treatment of trauma. This beautifully articulated and case-illustrated book accomplishes that goal in spades! A must-read for every therapist, teacher, student, and patient who is working and/or living with the debilitating effects of trauma in search of revitalized development.
—Alitta Kullman, Ph.D., Author of Hunger for Connection: Finding Meaning in Eating Disorders

Finally, a book that brilliantly weaves together multiple theories of trauma to create an integrated and comprehensive, easy to understand, narrative of Continue reading The Developmental Lens by Gwyneth Kerr Erwin, Ph.D., Psy.D. from IPBooks

A Connecting Door by David Glessal Millar new from IPBooks

Click Here to Purchase: A Connecting Door by David Glessal Millar new from IPBooks

Praise for A Connecting Door;

If you pick up David Millar‘s book, you will find it hard to put down.

On the one hand it’s a kind of detective story, reminiscent of Ferdinand Mount’s brilliant Kiss Myself Goodbye. In this case the subject is not an aunt but himself; a boy from Birmingham born in the middle of the Second World War to a gents’ tailor and outfitters assistant and the daughter of a shop keeper. It’s about what happened to them, what happened to him, what happened all around him and what he did to himself.
On the other hand, the boy, now a very experienced psychoanalyst, who writes the book looks back at himself to draw conclusions about fundamental matters in being human and alive in our era of excess and of breaking our planetary boundaries.

Combining the personal and philosophical in an accessible way, Millar’s book creates highly moving, intelligent and unusual analysis providing a powerful antidote to the modern politics of identity, “more more” and ‘someone is to blame”. For those who don’t know how psychoanalysis has moved on, it will be a revelation. Millar uses his depth knowledge of the subject to offer a compelling set of ideas about how we might face and even survive the catastrophe we humans have been bringing on ourselves. —

–Professor David Tuckett. Emeritus Professor of Decision-Making, University College London (UCL), Senior Research Fellow, the Blavatnik School of Government, University of Oxford and Distinguished Fellow, British Psychoanalytic Society.

Lucian Freud review – the Queen, Leigh Bowery and the artist’s ex-wives stand brutally revealed

Click Here to Read: Lucian Freud review – the Queen, Leigh Bowery and the artist’s ex-wives stand brutally revealed:  From the monarch to the naked performance artist who was living with Aids, Freud paints life lived in the face of death, with an unsentimental eye for human tenderness by Jonathan Jones on the Guqrdian website on   September 27, 2022.  

Lucian Freud Naked Portraits Museum at  Moderne Kunst Frankfurt 2000 with Rolf Lauter. Image: Photoarchiv Mirko Krizanovic Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons