Reading

  • Thread starter Thread starter morganlefay
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morganlefay

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I love to read.

Currently re-reading "The Nice and the Good" by Iris Murdoch.

A favourite of mine is "Asylum" by Patrick McGrath.

MLF
 
Aaah. An important book (IMO) I should like to mention.

"Stalking the Soul" by Dr. Marie-France Hirigoyen, a French psychiatrist.
Perhaps this book might also be mentioned on the thread which deals with psychopathy

MLF
 
Hi morganlefay,

There are several threads that mention "Stalking the Soul" if you do a search on that phrase. Here's one of them:

http://cassiopaea.org/forum/index.php?topic=3521.msg23762#msg23762

It sounds like an interesting book. Maybe you could distill the finer points for us?

Oh yeah, glad to see that you love to read. You'll feel right at home here among us bookworms! :)
 
Helly Ryan:

This is the blurb on Stalking the Soul:

Claiming that emotionally abusive relationships are widespread in marriages, families and the workplace, French psychotherapist Hirigoyen illuminates the subtle, insidious relationship that "emotional abusers" and their "victims" evolve. While recognizing that the "clean violence" of an emotional abuser,who as a "natural manipulator" often attracts others with a dynamic, winning style is hard to prove, she aims to enable those who are being abused to recognize what's going on and get help, and to alert her fellow therapists to the danger signs. Often, emotional abuse builds over a long period of time until it becomes so unbearable that victims lash out in frustration and anger, only to appear unstable and aggressive themselves. This, according to Hirigoyen, is the intent of many abusers: to systematically "destabilize" and confuse their victims (with irrational, threatening behavior that preys on the victim's fears and self-doubts), to isolate and control them and ultimately to destroy their identity. These relentless "predators" are also incapable of compassion or empathy, always blame the victim and never see their actions as wrong. Already a bestseller in France, this clearly written and compassionate book offers sensible advice (get support and leave the relationship if the abuse is personal; take legal action if it is professional), though it may not be easy to execute in every case."

MLF
 
Another two favourites:

"The Left Hand of Darkness" by Ursula Le Guin

and

"Spirit Wrestler" by James Houston

(this second one really fascinates me, and I have read it again and again).

MLF
 
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