Jeremy Holmes, MD, FRCPsych, is an Honorary Professor at the University of Exeter. His books include John Bowlby and Attachment Theory (2014), Attachment in Therapeutic Practice (2017) and The Brain has a Mind of its Own (2020). Gardening, Green politics and grand-parenting now parallel his lifelong devotion to psychoanalytic psychotherapy practice and attachment theory. Anthony Storr, MD, FRCPsych, (1920–2001), was an eminent analytical psychologist, psychiatrist, author and broadcaster. After analytic practice in London, he became Oxford’s first NHS Medical Psychotherapist. In a rare combination, he held Fellowships of Oxford’s Green College, the Royal College of Psychiatrists and the Royal Society of Literature.
‘Want to know about contemporary psychotherapy practice – what to do, why to do it, when to do it, and how to do it? This new edition of a seminal text is for you. Originally aimed at those starting out as a psychotherapist, the book remains first choice of primers on psychotherapy practice. If you have read it before, read it again! It is as new and fresh as it ever was. Practical as ever, this new addition skilfully intertwines the wisdom and art of old with the science and research of the new. Clinical examples, many delightfully pithy and humourous, enliven the discussion and brilliantly foreground the humanity of psychotherapy.’ Anthony Bateman, FRCPsych, Consultant to Anna Freud Centre London; Visiting Professor, University College London; Honorary Professor of Psychotherapy, Copenhagen University ‘Holmes is an inspired choice to update this classic work! The Art of Psychotherapy was always a useful book, but it seems that Holmes has made it more valuable by making it more accessible and more rooted in everyday psychiatry. It will obviously be a great book for trainees in psychiatry and psychotherapy, but equally useful for interested lay people who may be thinking about exploring themselves in psychodynamic psychotherapy. It is readable, and refreshing in its honesty and kindliness. Congratulations on a superb updated edition; especially about on-line working, the great debate du jour.’ Gwen Adshead is forensic psychiatrist and psychotherapist. She is qualified as a group analyst and trained in mindfulness based cognitive therapy and mentalisation based therapy. For the least 30 years, she has worked as a therapist with violence perpetrators in secure hospitals and prisons. Gwen has written and co-authored many academic papers and books; chiefly in the field of attachment theory, personality disorder and ethics in mental health. Her most recent work The Devil You Know is co-authored with Eileen Horne