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| | April Book of the Month
Crossing the Owl’s Bridge: A Guide for
Grieving People Who Still Love
Paperback Regular Price $16.95 Sale Price $13.95
Crossing the Owl’s Bridge uses the wisdom of worldwide folk tales to demonstrate how to share, ritualize, and transform grief. Each chapter describes psychological tasks as communicated through folk tales, offers stories about others, and provides guidelines for application.
The premise is that although we do have to say goodbye to our material relationship, we are also being presented with a chance to say hello to a different type of relationship. Crossing the Owl’s Bridge illustrates creative outcomes to mourning that allow one to recognize, contain, release, and yet stay in relationship and keep loving. |
| | | | New Releases
The Rilke Lectures
Prepared for a Pacifica Graduate Institute course on The Poetic Basis of Mind, these eight lectures stand on their own as a unique and cohesive treatment of many core concerns of the soul. As a unified whole, the lecture-essays focus upon dynamics internal to what the author (only now, years after their original composition) has come to call “the Sophianic Cross.”
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Traces In Dreams: The Path to Essence
Traces in Dreams: The Path to Essence offers a kaleidoscopic exploration of dreams through diverse perspectives—Jungian archetypal psychology, Advaita Vedanta’s nonduality, Sankhya’s dualism of Purusha and Prakriti, and the Zen-inspired kanji Mu (無)—revealing their interpretations as pathways to universal essence.
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Twilight at Bollingen
Twilight at Bollingen is a play with four characters—C.G. Jung, Aniela Jaffê, Erich Neumann and Marie-Louis von Franz—speaking about Jung’s legacy.
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The Tao of Alchemy: A Path of Individuation
In The Tao of Alchemy, clinical psychologist and Jungian advocate Robert F. Mannis, PhD, invites readers to explore the symbolic quest for inner transformation through the lens of modern alchemy. Unlike traditional approaches rooted in collective spirituality or external judgment, this work offers a deeply personal and experiential path to meaning, fulfillment, and spiritual growth. ​ Drawing on decades of psychotherapy experience and Jungian analysis, Dr. Mannis illuminates the mysteries of the unconscious (the verido) and its dynamic interplay with everyday life (the nigredo).
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In Honor of the Feminine: Jungian Analysts and the Complexities of Love
Eight women—Jungian psychoanalysts— share our personal stories of the emergence of and transformative manifestations of the archetypal feminine, the complexities of love and the necessity for Eros – relatedness to inner and outer realities. Contributors include (Editor) Marilyn Marshall, Constance Romero, Carolyn Bates, Nancy Qualls-Corbett, Susan Negley, Janice Quinn, Barbara Friedman and Jacqueline Wright.
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| | Tending the Fire: Creativity, Purpose, and the Unfolding Self
By Enrique MartĂnez Celaya & James Hollis
This collaboration invites readers into a conversation where questions, not answers, take center stage. Enrique MartĂnez Celaya and James Hollis believe that it is the questions we ask—about meaning, purpose, and self—that make life both interesting and developmental. Answers may provide closure, but questions open doors, encouraging growth and transformation. Welcome to these questions. They are already at work in your life. By engaging with them more consciously, you may find yourself on a path to a larger frame, a larger journey, and a more interesting life.
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Welcoming Our Gods Back Home: The Wisdom of Psychological Mysticism
by Jerry R. Wright
Jungian psychoanalyst Dr. Jerry R. Wright considers welcoming our gods back home to the human psyche, where they were birthed and where they belong, to be our most urgent psychospiritual task. Until that happens, our species will likely continue to do great harm to ourselves, to each other, and to our Earth home.
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