Rating: Summary: beautifully written Review: This book takes you inside therapy from a therapist's point of view, yet we also learn the therapist was once a patient herself. It will make you laugh and cry, and you won't easily forget it.
Rating: Summary: An easy read. Review: This book was an interesting and easy read. I enjoyed the stories of the patients and it gave me some insight on schizophrenia. The book though left me wanting to know more about the patients and less on what she thought and her own feelings. She often made herself look like the one in need of help. Overall, it was a good read that I got through in 2 days.
Rating: Summary: lyrical account of mental illness. maybe even too lyrical Review: this is a very compassionate and honest look at a group of mentally ill patients.Slater is a good writer, though she sometimes goes too far out of her way to make a poetic analogy. While she is honest about her own weaknesses as a therapist, she tends to come off as being the one to help her patients when no one else could. Despite these issues, it's a great read.
Rating: Summary: A Country Worth Visiting Review: Welcome to My Country is a beautifully written narrative about psychotherapist Lauren Slater's challening work with mental patients in Boston. She goes to greath lengths to get inside the minds of each patient, following their schizophrenic dreams and fears, their history, and treatment. Her prose is vivid and poetic, albeit a little overwritten at times. Her metaphors are far-fetched, but the language is astounding. The ending is a bit short, but works well. The reader does not get a true grasp of Slater's own private struggle with mental illness, but it is touched on enough to show how her compassion and experiences set the groundwork for her entrance into the mental health field. It is more lyrical essay than psychological text. For all intents and purposes, this book seems to have more to do with Slater recognizing her own voice and self in her patients (much countertransference) than the patients themselves. However, the memoir, at its most basic point, is a fascinating study into Slater's own psyche.
Rating: Summary: Bravely human and poetic prose. Review: Welcome to My Country's deeply poetic and compassionate essays on Lauren Slater's early work as a psychologist with very ill patients closely following her own very difficult personal passage thru emotional illness and hospitalization as a teenager and young adult blew a hole in my heart. It is brilliant, brilliant writing, impossible to put down. I read the last chapter "The Three Spheres" first (they are freestanding chapters) as part of an anthology of essays on Surviving Crisis. Be prepared to marvel and to weep.
Rating: Summary: an eloquent memoir Review: When I first read this book, I was training to be a psychotherapist, and to make sense of the new feelings and experiences associated with that role. I loved her attitude toward her clients--that it is a privilege to know your clients and to relate to them, that "the border between the helper and the one who is helped is always blurry." I highly recommend this book for counselors, counselors in training, clients undergoing therapy, and for those who enjoy memoirs. I have read this book many times--I appreciate how well written it is and how the author uses her own psychiatric history as a tool to understand others' experiences. Wonderful book!
Rating: Summary: worth the trip Review: While I'm ambivalent about writers who seem intent on building an industry out of their psychic pain, this book out of all of Slater's is the least focused on her mental problems. Instead we are introduced to people, who for all their issues, want the same things from life as more normal people - to communicate, to have their stories heard, to find love, and ultimately, to connect. Perhaps the most interesting is a woman who suffers from the most unglamorous illness of all - depression and whose brief lifting of mood and return to "ordinary" life is all-too-short and the more heartbreaking to read about because of it. These subjects come across as real individuals, not just freaks. And at the end of the book, we learn why Slater possesses such empathy - she knows the country from more than a clincian's viewpoint.
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