T. Byram Karasu says that healing, at best, is not what the healer does,
but what he is; that what really matters are not the schools of
psychotherapy, but the psychotherapists themselves. In this deeply
moving and self-revealing book, Karasu portrays the therapist as healer
through a series of clinical vignettes from the treatment of a younger
therapist whom the author perceives to be more intelligent, talented,
and better educated than himself. This patient, a veteran of a classical
analysis and two lengthy therapies, challenges the therapist at every
turn and engages him in a search for new experiential truths. The reader
is privy to the internal monologue of the therapist as he conceives of
and rejects interpretations, looks to varied experts for help, and ends
with an inner voice not heard before.