"For a number of years now, Thomas Ogden's publications have become a genre of their own. With Rediscovering Psychoanalysis, Ogden has written a profound and significant work, one that heralds a new age of psychoanalytic thinking and psychoanalytic practice.It also alters our way of thinking of psychoanalysis itself...Ogden's style itself is worthy of a work of its own." - James S. Grotstein, The Psychoanalytic Quarterly
"Thomas Ogden has deepened our understanding of how to make therapeutic use of strong emotional reactions to our patients as much as any contemporary psychoanalytic writer. Thomas Ogden's most recent book is an enjoyable work that is capable of affecting readers in both intellectually challenging and emotionally resonant ways. His writing has long been admired for its incisive and precise explication of topics such as projective identification and the "analytic third", and the reader gets a healthy dose of his theoretical style. There is also much fresh and playful prose that is highly authobiographical and contrasts substantially from his other work... Any serious psychoanalytic practitioner who has devoted time and effort to develop a solid understanding of the psychoanalytic process and has witnessed its power and complexity is likely to enjoy reading Ogden's latest work. Ogden has ventured into new territory in terms of the form of his writing and this is courageous and mostly successful. Most notably, we get more of a sense of the man who has contributed so much to the field he loves." - Michael C. Klein, Ph.D., Psychoanalytic Psychology
"Thomas Ogden is one of the most creative psychoanalysts of our time. His work, papers and books are among the most quoted in the entire world. This book will be a study text for many psychoanalysts, clinical psychologists and psychotherapists, since it reveals him as an excellent teacher. He repeats his central concepts at key points, a didactic strategy which induces readers to think and rethink them in various contexts: analysis, supervision, teaching and writing." - Susan Rogers and David Rosenfeld, University of Buenos Aires, Argentina
"Ogden manages as only few psychoanalytic authors can to summarize ideas in precise forms... Ogden repeatedly demonstrates his sensitive and superior clinical skills. Yet his way of writing is never intimidating, but inspiring. Finally, Ogden encourages his readers to think about psychoanalysis innovatively and rediscover it. Overall, reading this book is a pleasure and clinical enrichment at the same time." - Daniel Barth, Bulletin of the European Psychoanalytic Federation, Vol 63, 2009
"Thomas Ogden is at it again, bringing his unique blend of lucidity and imagination to the theory and practice of psychoanalysis. He is as adept at pushing analysis into new territory as he is at distilling the major concepts of psychoanalytic thinkers." - Ellen Y. Siegelman, Jung Journal, Fall 2009
"Thomas Ogden is one of the most creative psychoanalysts of our time. His work, papers and books are among the most quoted in the entire world. This book will be a study text for many psychoanalysts, clinical psychologists and psychotherapists, since it reveals him as an excellent teacher. He repeats his central concepts at key points, a didactic strategy which induces readers to think and rethink them in various contexts: analysis, supervision, teaching and writing." - Susan Rogers and David Rosenfeld, University of Buenos Aires, Argentina
"Ogden manages as only few psychoanalytic authors can to summarize ideas in precise forms... Ogden repeatedly demonstrates his sensitive and superior clinical skills. Yet his way of writing is never intimidating, but inspiring. Finally, Ogden encourages his readers to think about psychoanalysis innovatively and rediscover it. Overall, reading this book is a pleasure and clinical enrichment at the same time." - Daniel Barth, Bulletin of the European Psychoanalytic Federation, Vol 63, 2009
"Thomas Ogden is at it again, bringing his unique blend of lucidity and imagination to the theory and practice of psychoanalysis. He is as adept at pushing analysis into new territory as he is at distilling the major concepts of psychoanalytic thinkers." - Ellen Y. Siegelman, Jung Journal, Fall 2009