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"What pleasure to see the dishonest, the inept, and the misguided deftly given their due, while praise is lavished on the deserving-for reasons well and truly stated."-Kirkus Reviews
A journey into the world's original extreme sport: downhill ski racing.
A magical and comedic take on modern love, the power of friendship, and the allure of disguise.
A witty and elegiac new collection from the author of "exhilarating, fierce [and] powerful" verse (Robert Pinsky, Washington Post).
Coffin's exciting saga, written with the immediacy of a combat correspondent, dramatizes why and how a small, poor, remote Northern state responded so quickly and enthusiastically to President Lincoln's first call to arms in 1861.
A dessert cookbook and portrait of an unconventional dessert maker.
This groundbreaking new Norton Anthology enables the six major, living, international world religions to speak to students in their own words.
This groundbreaking new Norton Anthology enables the six major, living, international world religions to speak to students in their own words.
Latin America's great poet rendered into English by the world's most celebrated translator of Spanish-language literature.
Charles King brings to life a remarkable era when a storied city stumbled into the modern world and reshaped the meaning of cosmopolitanism.
This book contains articles by members and associates of the Mental Research Institute, Palo Alto, based on their work in family therapy during the period 1965-1974.
Peer inside the White House as Presidents Kennedy and Johnson grapple with racial injustice in America.
This practical book is written for all those sailing and boat-building enthusiasts who take pleasure in making improvements to their craft.
After a life spent in a successful writing career that has left him bereft of creativity and worn in body and spirit, George Adamson goes to Greece on a journey of self-discovery and renewal.
A provocative answer to the ancient question: Is the Loch Ness monster fact or fantasy?
Until recently, psychoanalysis has been a most reluctant recipient of the new inheritance. For most of its century-long life it has clung to the positivist epistemology of Freud, its founding genius, belying his hope that his followers would be as skeptical about received wisdom in their time as he was in his. Psychoanalysis has protected itself from change by preserving its store of founding metaphors in their original form.
An expansive overview of our storehouses of knowledge, from the earliest library building (Philadelphia, 1745) to midcentury modern and beyond.
Bringing an evidence base to classic writings that opened psychotherapy up to more than one person at a time-the couple.
Integrating Western psychological understanding with ancient Eastern and wisdom traditions, Siegel addresses how spiritual resonance is achieved within the psychotherapeutic process in The Sacred Path of the Therapist.
Distinguished clinicians demonstrate how play and creativity have everything to do with the deepest healing, growth and personal transformation.
Bringing interpersonal neurobiology and narrative therapy together.
One of the most celebrated writers and teachers of fiction, Richard Bausch, pairs his insight and inspiration with Norton's trusted editorial standards to deliver the finest teaching anthology available.
A delicious approach to hygge-50 recipes to satisfy and savour.
Psychotherapy researchers have traditionally focused on therapy outcomes outside of the therapeutic setting. This presents the difficulty of correlating outcomes with what goes on in the clinical setting, a nearly impossible task. It is no surprise, consequently, that therapists have seen such research as largely irrelevant to clinical practice.
Both William O'Dwyer, the 104th mayor of New York City, and Frank Costello, prime minister of the underworld, were immigrants, and there the similarity might have ended, except for the televised Kefauver hearings on organized crime in 1951 that linked them forever.
This is the story of one woman's struggle to keep a family together in the teeth of a system that makes life a series of uprootings. For Poppie Nongena is black and lives in present-day South Africa.
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