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Christopher Hopwood, Ph.D., Professor of Psychology, University of Zurich
"Evans' book on Harry Stack Sullivan is the best summary of Sullivan's work on the market today. It clearly describes all his basic concepts and their clinical implications. And this second edition contains clinical material illustrating an interpersonal approach to trauma work. Patients re-enact their traumas in therapy in order to tell the history of their interpersonal suffering. And if the therapist can listen with a relational ear, he can provide a climate of safety where the unsayable in the past can be said in the present. If for no other reason, the interpersonal understanding of anxiety and the strategies of self-other protection alone will reward the reader with new vistas of understanding."
Jon Frederickson, MSW, Faculty, Washington School of Psychiatry; Author, Co-Creating Change and Co-Creating Safety
"In this engaging new edition of his 1996 book, Barton Evans shows himself to be the pre-eminent authority on all things Sullivanian. Readers will be intrigued as Evans connects Sullivan's life story to his interpersonal theory and then traces the influence of Sullivan's concepts on modern psychotherapy, psychological assessment, social psychology, and psychiatry. Sullivan remains an underappreciated genius, and Evans helps us recognize his immense and far-reaching impact. Readers interested in Collaborative/Therapeutic Assessment (C/TA) will especially appreciate Evans' discussion of current interpersonal models of psychological assessment."
Stephen E. Finn, Ph.D., President, Therapeutic Assessment Institute; Clinical Associate Professor of Psychology, University of Texas at Austin
"Dr. Evans succeeds in this masterful effort to "re-collect" the silent, forgotten, and sometimes maligned contributions of the genius Harry Stack Sullivan. Evans' scholarly research and skillful explanation of Sullivan's largely unacknowledged imprint on contemporary developments in psychoanalysis, theories of anxiety and psychopathology, and the vicissitudes of child development reminds us of how his ideas never really disappeared. In this gem of a book, Evans makes clear that at the heart of Sullivan's theories was the enduring strength of interpersonal connections, which can "heal the developmental warps" that unfortunately occur in some. In Evans' beautiful words, it is the "love between humans which ultimately liberates us." These words have never been more important than they are now."
James H. Kleiger, Psy.D., ABPP, ABAP, Independent Practice Bethesda, MD; Past President, Baltimore-Washington Psychoanalytic Institute