
Stress, coping, and depression
Sheri L. Johnson
1999
If you enjoyed Depression and aggression in family interaction by Gerald R. Patterson, you likely appreciate Mental Depression, Mental health, Family. These similar reads match the tone, themes, and audience of the original.

Sheri L. Johnson
1999

Jozef Corveleyn, Sidney J. Blatt
2005

J. Mark G. Williams
1984

Susan Nolen-Hoeksema, Lori M. Hilt
2008

Karl A. Pillemer, Kathleen McCartney
1991

John Sedgwick
2007

Booth, Alan, Ann C. Crouter
2002

Ana Maria Rossi, Pamela L. Perrewe, Steven L. Sauter
2001

Bennet B. Murdock, Stephan Lewandowsky
1991

Shea M. Dunham, Shannon B. Dermer, Jon Carlson
2011

Bronisław Malinowski
2003

Elizabeth Wurtzel
1994
Elizabeth Wurtzel's New York Times best-selling memoir, with a new afterword "Sparkling, luminescent prose . . . A powerful portrait of one girl's journey through the purgatory of depression and back." --New York Times "A book that became a cultural touchstone." --New Yorker Elizabeth Wurtzel writes with her finger on the faint pulse of an overdiagnosed generation whose ruling icons are Kurt Cobain, Xanax, and pierced tongues. Her famous memoir of her bouts with depression and skirmishes with drugs, Prozac Nation is a witty and sharp account of the psychopharmacology of an era for readers of Girl, Interrupted and Sylvia Plath's The Bell Jar.

Paul C. Rosenblatt
2005

Frank McCourt
1996

Lynn Franks Johnston
1990
The popular family comic strip, syndicated in more than one thousand newspapers, returns with a collection of touching and humorous cartoons. Original.

Jack O. Balswick, Judith K. Balswick
1989
The Family is a resource for college and seminary faculty, pastors, and Christian counselors. Now in its third edition, this study has been revised and updated throughout to include the results of current research and contemporary trends.--From publisher's description.

Alice Miller
1979
The “drama” of the gifted—i.e., sensitive, alert—child consists of his recognition at a very early age of his parents' needs and of his adaptation to those needs. In the process, he learns to repress rather than to acknowledge his own intense feelings because they are unacceptable to his parents. Although it will not always be possible to avoid these “ugly” feelings (anger, indignation, despair, jealousy, fear) in the future, they will split off, and the most vital part of the “true self” (a key phrase in Alice Miller's works) will not be integrated into the personality. This leads to emotional insecurity and loss of self, which are revealed in depression or concealed behind a facade of grandiosity.Alice Miller defines the ideal state of genuine vitality, of free access to the true self and to authentic individual feelings that have their roots in childhood, as “healthy narcissism.” Narcissistic disturbances, on the other hand, represent for her solitary confinement of the true self within the prison of the false self. This is regarded less as an illness than as a tragedy.The examples Alice Miller presents make us aware of the child's unarticulated suffering and of the tragedy of parents who are unavailable to their children—the same parents who, when they were children, were available to fill their parents' needs. In her psychoanalytical work, Dr. Miller found that her patients' ability to experience authentic feelings, especially feelings of sadness, had been for the most part destroyed; it was her task to help her patients try to regain that long-lost capacity for genuine feelings that is the source of natural vitality. Many people who have read her books have discovered within themselves for the first time in their lives the little child they once were. This may explain the unusually strong and deep reactions Alice Miller's books have evoked in so many readers from different countries. The Drama of the Gifted Child and the Search for the True Self is the origina

Jean Illsley Clarke
1978

Ariel Kalil, Thomas C. DeLeire
2004

Annie Payson Call
1905

Steve Biddulph
1984

Isabel Allende
1982
In dem mit Phantasie, Zartheit u. Ironie gestalteten, drei Generationen umfassenden Familienepos spiegeln sich die gesellschaftl. u. polit. Ereignisse in Chile zwischen Jahrhundertwende u. Militärdiktatur.

Claudia Black
1982
Offers personal advice for the children of alcoholics and discusses the family relationships of alcoholics.

Danielle Steel
1981

Tessa Baradon
2009
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