This well-respected guide to psychoanalytic psychotherapy addresses key issues for both beginning and practicing therapists, from the rhythm of the initial, middle, and final stages of
therapy to the setting up of an office and the handling of fees and insurance. The book also deals with the management of borderline and potentially suicidal or homocidal patients in an
out-patient setting. Unique in their direct approach to problems in a therapist’s own life, the authors also discuss transference and contertransference issues that arise with pregnancy,
changes in the therapist’s love attachments, age, illness and a death in the practitioner’s family. New in this second edition is a chapter on women therapists and women patients.