Mona DeKoven Fishbane, Daniel J. Siegel
Facilitating change in couple therapy by understanding how the brain works to maintain—and break—old habits.More
Dottie Higgins-Klein
Incorporating mindfulness and family therapy into play-family sessions.More
David B. Wexler
Third Edition, Revised and Updated
A successful all-in-one program for treating domestic violence offenders.More
Lloyd I. Sederer, MD, Glenn Close
Expert advice from the medical director of the country’s largest state mental health system and the mental health editor of The Huffington Post.More
Monica McGoldrick
The godmother of genograms revises her revelatory work that explores how to reconnect with your past and invent a new future.More
Marion Solomon, Stan Tatkin
Neuroscience and couples therapy come together to help couples break patterns of bad behavior.More
David Schnarch
“A classic.” —William H. Masters, MDMore
Daniel A. Hughes
An expert clinician brings attachment theory into the realm of parenting skills.More
Carole Gammer
Making sure the child's voice in family therapy is heard.More
Margaret Wehrenberg
A strategy-filled handbook to understand, manage, and conquer your own stress.More
Bryce D. McLeod, Jeffrey J. Wood
With over 10% of all children meeting the criteria for an anxiety
disorder, these disorders are among the most common psychiatric
problems experienced by schoolage kids, and can significantly interfere
with their family and peer relationships and their performance at
school.More
Joe Kort
All the answers straight clinicians need to work effectively with gay and lesbian clients.More
Monica McGoldrick, Randy Gerson, Sueli Petry
Third Edition
Widely used by both family therapists and all health care
professionals, the genogram is a graphic way of organizing the mass of
information gathered during a family assessment and finding patterns in
the family system for more targeted treatment.More
Roy Q. Sanders
The most recent epidemiological data from the Centers for Disease Control (2013) suggests that 1 in every 88 children has some form of autism.More
William N. Friedrich
Sexually inappropriate touching, language, and other actions on the
part of children are difficult to diagnose and treat.
More