Stephen Grosz
Stephen Grosz (born 1952) is a psychoanalyst and author.
Born in Indiana and educated at the University of California, Berkeley and Balliol College, Oxford, Grosz teaches clinical technique at the Institute of Psychoanalysis[1][2] and psychoanalytic theory at University College London. He has been Consultant Adult Psychotherapist at the Portman Clinic in London. His writings have appeared in the Financial Times and Granta.
His book, The Examined Life, was published by Chatto and Windus (UK) in January 2013[3] and spent the first three months after publication in the top ten of the Sunday Times non-fiction bestseller list.
The Examined Life was published in the United States by W.W. Norton[4] and in Canada by Random House Canada in May 2013. It has been translated into over 25 languages including Dutch, Italian, German, Portuguese, Korean, Spanish, Turkish, Russian and Swedish, and will soon be published in Japanese, Chinese and Hebrew.[5]
In the New York Times, Michiko Kakutani praised the book as “an insightful and beautifully written… a series of slim, piercing chapters that read like a combination of Chekhov and Oliver Sacks.”[6]
An abridged version of the book was broadcast on BBC Radio 4. The Examined Life has been long-listed for the 2013 Guardian First Book Award.[7]
The Examined Life was chosen as one of 2013’s Books of the Year in: The New York Times (Michiko Kakutani) • Sunday Times (James McConnachie) • Observer (Lisa Appignanesi) • Salon (Emma Brockes) • Mail on Sunday (Craig Brown) • Observer (Lucy Lethbridge) • The British Psychological Society
External links
- Author Website
- Profile at The Guardian
- The Bookseller
- Rogers, Coleridge and White Literary Agency
- Night and Day, Issue Three, Vintage Books
- Poet Wendy Cope in conversation with Stephen Grosz
- "The Fire Alarm is Ringing. What Are You Waiting For?" (Excerpt from Stephen Grosz's The Examined Life)
References
- ↑ The Bookseller
- ↑ Institute of Psychoanalysis
- ↑ Publisher Page
- ↑ Norton Author Page
- ↑ Rogers, Coleridge & White: Rights
- ↑ "Listening for Clues to Mind’s Mysteries" by Michiko Kakutani July 8, 2013
- ↑ Guardian first book award 2013 longlist combines sex and psychoanalysis (The Guardian, Friday 23 August 2013)