Reviews in the First Impressions (Brief Reviews) Category

Our ‘First Impressions’ section offers brief overviews and initial impressions of recently published books in counselling, psychotherapy, psychology and related areas.

Caroline Brazier on Listening to the Other

Last updated 7th September 2009

Brazier reminds us that counselling often goes beyond offering a non-judgemental space in which the client can listen to and experience themselves, to actively encourage a kind of self-preoccupation which can actually make one more isolated and miserable.

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Zerbe on Integrated Treatment of Eating Disorders

Last updated 29th June 2009

This book seems to contain all of human life, from the scientific details through the full range of emotions, including the extremes of love and hate. And it emanates a sense that although we all get shaken sometimes, and life is dangerous, every feeling is expressible and every situation is workable.

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Counselling for Post-traumatic Stress Disorder

Last updated 23rd June 2009

This book is important reading, as it competently deals with the treatment of a major health issue which is both prevalent and chronic, with strong co-morbidity. While the tone didn’t particularly engage me, I did finish the book with some insights and solid understanding.

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Mindfulness- & Acceptance-Based Behavioral Therapies

Last updated 22nd June 2009

The basic conceptualisation of human experience offered by this book is that distress arises from our relationship with our own internal experience. The remedy goes beyond (and could be seen as contrary to) the traditional cognitive therapy approach of disentangling the client from the thoughts, questioning them and replacing them with more realistic and helpful ones.

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Helping Adolescents at Risk: Prevention of Multiple Problem Behaviors

Last updated 13th May 2008

This is a rigorous scholarly text dedicated to a very real social problem, and it does try to identify successful and unsuccessful community and state-wide attempts to prevent or reduce youth problems. It doesn’t pretend to be a self-help book or parenting manual, or indeed a profound philosophical or political analysis.

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