A fascinating dialogue on the human desire to make up stories between
Nobel Prize-winning author J. M. Coetzee and psychotherapist Arabella
Kurtz
The Good Story is an exchange between a writer with a long-standing
interest in moral psychology and a psychotherapist with training in
literary studies. Coetzee and Kurtz consider psychotherapy and its wider
social context from different perspectives, but at the heart of both
their approaches is a fascination with narrative. Working alone, the
writer is in control of the story he or she tells. The therapist, on the
other hand, collaborates with the patient in telling the story that
might reveal the "truth."
The authors discuss both individual psychology and the psychology of the
group: the school classroom, the gang, the settler nation in which the
brutal deeds of the ancestors must be accommodated into a national
story. In a meeting of the minds that is illuminating, surprising, and
thought provoking, Coetzee and Kurtz explore the human capacity for
self-examination--our attempts to understand our own individual life
stories as well as our part in the larger story through language.