This thoughtful book manages the difficult task of talking about loving kindness in psychotherapy with clarity and compassion but without sentimentality. The breadth of disciplines it draws on means that readers will find themselves challenged to see things from a different perspective and will be both absorbed and moved.
Penelope Campling, psychiatrist and psychotherapist, author of Intelligent Kindness and Don't Turn Away
Loving Kindness in Psychotherapy is a welcome addition to contemporary thinking about psychotherapy. Expanding on a century-old debate - originating in the contrasting views of Freud and Ferenczi - about the healing role of love in the psychotherapeutic relationship, it gets to the heart of the therapeutic enterprise.
Rabbi Howard Cooper, psychoanalytic psychotherapist
Following contemporary neuroscience, Heather Reeves suggests that loving kindness has the potential to protect and heal us and is essential in psychotherapy. Theory, research, philosophical ideas and examples from literature and clinical practice are skilfully woven together, offering a refreshing and engaging new perspective.
Gill Westland, body psychotherapist, author of Verbal and Non-Verbal Communication in Psychotherapy
Loving Kindness in Psychotherapy is a well-informed and scholarly work which should appeal to anyone with an interest in Medical Humanities. Heather Reeves is a psychotherapist, with a broad knowledge of English literature. Her book, which is a detailed analysis of the history of psychotherapy and the influences upon it up to the present day, explores the way in which loving kindness is essential to the psychotherapeutic relationship. She sees it as a collaborative art, offering the therapeutic kinship which should be a vital component within all caring professions.
Dr Tony Fincham, Vice Chairman of the Thomas Hardy Society, in the Thomas Hardy Journal