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"Vic Sedlak is much admired as a psychoanalyst who can sustain an independent point of view and is not afraid to speak his mind. Here he examines the role of the analyst's reactions and responses in the psychoanalytic session. He covers a wide field but for me he is particularly convincing when he describes how the analyst's responsiveness is especially affected by his capacity to accept the emergence of hatred, hostility and destructiveness in his patient and also in himself. His arguments and the vivid clinical material makes for fascinating reading that all those working in the mental health field will find valuable and stimulating."-John Steiner, Training and Supervising Psychoanalyst, Distinguished Fellow, British Psychoanalytical Society
"Anyone who is interested in understanding the unconscious dynamics in the therapist/patient relationship will be rewarded by reading Vic Sedlak's accessible and insightful study of the "glancing" thought; the thought that the clinician resists knowing without knowing he or she is avoiding it. Sedlak, a highly respected and experienced psychoanalyst, writes openly and honestly about the role his super-ego and ego ideal play in supporting or impeding his efforts to recognise and understand the glancing thought in his on-going clinical practice and supervision."-Donald Campbell, Training and supervising analyst, Distinguished Fellow and past President, British Psychoanalytic Society