John M. Gottman
An eminent therapist explains what makes couples compatible and how to sustain a happy marriage.More
David Schnarch
“A classic.” —William H. Masters, MDMore
Joe Kort
All the answers straight clinicians need to work effectively with gay and lesbian clients.More
William N. Friedrich
Sexually inappropriate touching, language, and other actions on the
part of children are difficult to diagnose and treat.
More
Douglas Flemons, Shelley Green
Expanded
Effective techniques for fashioning pleasurable and satisfying sex lives.More
Sharon Lamb
A responsible, realistic, and sex-positive approach to sexuality in youth.
More
Patti Britton
This is the essential resource for professionals seeking sex-positive approaches for their clients.More
Linda Stone Fish, Rebecca G. Harvey
Youth are coming out as gay, lesbian, bisexual, or transgendered at
increasingly younger ages.More
Nancy Gambescia, Robert E. Jenkins, Gerald R. Weeks
Infidelity is one of the leading presenting problems for couples entering counseling.More
Richard Balon, Robert Taylor Segraves
Sexual side effects of pharmacological agents are often an unspoken cause of treatment noncompliance.More
Nancy Gambescia, Gerald R. Weeks
The lack of sexual desire, known clinically as hypoactive sexual desire
(HSD), is generally recognized as the most common sexual problem in
America.
More
Nancy Gambescia, Gerald R. Weeks
With the release of Viagra, erectile dysfunction has become an acceptable topic of advertising and public discussion.More
Randi Ettner
This book is a comprehensive guide to understanding and treating gender
identity disorders.
More
Theresa L. Crenshaw, James P. Goldberg
Highlighting the complex interaction of biology and emotion in sexual
chemistry, this book systematically evaluates drugs that can inhibit
desire, cause impotence, block orgasm, or affect sexual functioning in
other ways and provides a system for evaluating any and all drugs, even
ones not yet on the market, by summarizing sexual mechanisms of action.More
Joyce McDougall
"A mature, considered presentation of [McDougall's] current thinking on sexuality . . . simultaneously impassioned and dispassionate, erudite and plain-spoken, conservative in her insistence on basic psychoanalytic assumptions and radical in her celebration of intimate human diversity." --Contemporary PsychologyMore