Reseña del editor:
The therapist's office remains one of the few private places in our world. On the Couch, a scintillating collection of contemporary American short stories, provides nineteen separate windows onto this intensely private experience, from the heroine in Lorrie Moore's "If Only Bert Were Here, " who cannot recover from the death of her beloved cat (and who lists Haagen-Dazs as a distinct stage of mourning), to the couple in John Updike's "The Fairy Godfathers, " whose passion requires the presence of their respective therapists, to the protagonist of Stephen McCauley's "The Whole Truth, " who can, hilariously, barely keep straight the twisted lies she tells her therapist about her romantic entanglements.
Reseña del editor:
There is perhaps nothing more quintessentially twentieth century than therapy, a process that explores the depths of the psyche and the seemingly mundane, intricate dramas of everyday life. On the Couch eavesdrops on the therapeutic process as some of America's best-known writers take the reader inca the charged and sacred space between patient and analyst. On the Couch provides nineteen separate windows inca this intensely private experience. From the heroine in Lottie Moore's "If Only Bert Were Here", who cannot recover from the death of her beloved cat, to the couple in John Updike's "The Fairy, Godfathers", whose passion requires the presence of their respective therapists, to the protagonist in Stephen McCauley's "The Whole Truth", who can, hilariously, barely keep straight the tweed lies she cells her therapist about her romantic entanglements, these stories examine not only therapy but the and limitations.
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