Críticas:
Baltimore Sun, 5/31/09 "Livingston writes clearly, knowledgeably and with a wry humor as he discusses personality types to avoid (narcissists are No.1), virtues to look for and to inculcate in ourselves (flexibility ranks high) and ways to improve relationships (try reciprocal kindness)...A must-read." Boston Globe, , 6/7/09 "As gracefully written as Erich Fromm's classic The Art of Loving, How to Love recognizes the things in love that last, and may alter the way you look at others and yourself." Baltimore Sun, 5/31/09 Livingston writes clearly, knowledgeably and with a wry humor as he discusses personality types to avoid (narcissists are No.1), virtues to look for and to inculcate in ourselves (flexibility ranks high) and ways to improve relationships (try reciprocal kindness) A must-read. Boston Globe, , 6/7/09 As gracefully written as Erich Fromm s classic The Art of Loving, How to Love recognizes the things in love that last, and may alter the way you look at others and yourself. " "Baltimore Sun", 5/31/09 "Livingston writes clearly, knowledgeably and with a wry humor as he discusses personality types to avoid (narcissists are No.1), virtues to look for and to inculcate in ourselves (flexibility ranks high) and ways to improve relationships (try reciprocal kindness)...A must-read." "Boston Globe, ", 6/7/09 "As gracefully written as Erich Fromm's classic "The Art of Loving, How to Love" recognizes the things in love that last, and may alter the way you look at others and yourself."
Reseña del editor:
Dr. Gordon Livingston's books have resonated with readers as universally and deeply as earlier books by M. Scott Peck, Rollo May, and Erich Fromm. Now, Gordon Livingston--a physician of the human heart, a philosopher of human psychology--offers an urgently needed meditation on who best (and who best not) to love--and how best to love. Dr. Livingston's primary focus in this new book is on helping us to recognize in ourselves and in others constellations of character traits and what those traits imply both with regard to compatibility and future conduct. As in his previous books, here are Dr. Livingston's trademark gifts--an unerring sense of what is important, and what Elizabeth Edwards has characterized as "his unapologetic directness and his embracing compassion"--again deployed to provide readers everywhere with a much-needed alternative to the trial-and-error learning that makes wisdom such an expensive commodity.
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