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| May Book of the Month
Coming Together – Coming Apart: The Play of Opposites in Love Relationships
Paperback Regular Price $29 Sale Price $20 |
| | | Relationships are hard enough to negotiate without advice from outsiders who don’t know you at all. This book is not a “how-to” aimed at attaining the ideal. Rather, it is a how-it-is, an exploration of how relationships are, how they develop, how they deteriorate, how they may end and how they may even revive.
Strange as it may seem, it is not a book about how individual human beings are. It doesn’t concern itself with individual human failings. Those failings are given in being human. Instead, it describes the potentials for joy, disappointment and burden that are intrinsic to relationship and by extension to the process of becoming fully human.
In a world obsessed with attaining an illusory ideal, becoming fully human is the greatest threat. |
| | | New Releases
The Rilke Lectures – Philosophy – Religion – Myth – Poetry – Psychology: Windows into the Wisdom of the Sophianic Cross
By Daniel Joseph Polikoff
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.” That aegis includes not only psychology and art, but myth, religion, and philosophy as well, all pictured in relation to one another in the form of the cross-like configuration visible on this book’s cover.
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| | Twilight at Bollingen
by Murray Stein & Henry Abramovitch
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. The play is set at Jung’s Tower in Bollingen and takes place in the last years of Jung’s life. It is a tribute to Jung and to his successors, as well as a dialogue about the shadow of Analytical Psychology, the afterlife, and personal destiny.
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| | Traces In Dreams: The Path to Essence
by Žana Prinčevac
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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| | The Tao of Alchemy: A Path of Individuation
by Robert F. Mannis
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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| | | Wild Freedom: The Princess Who Found Her Name – On Fairy Tales, Imagination and the Creative Mind
by Dale M. Kushner
In this meditation on the creative mind, poet, novelist, essayist and student of Jung, Dale M. Kushner revisits a fairy tale she wrote decades ago during a time of crisis and uncertainty to examine the condition of “self-enchantment,” a state of being that infuses life with the healing power of creativity and illuminates the luminous darkness within. |
| | | | Coming Soon
Jung’s Map of the Soul: Deeper Explorations
by Murray Stein
Releasing May 18
Jung’s Map of the Soul – Deeper Explorations is both a basic introduction to Carl Jung’s psychological theories and a venture into looking more deeply into his genius as this is expressed in his Collected Works, his recently published letters and seminars, his Red Book: Liber Novus and his “autobiography,” Memories, Dreams, Reflections.
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| | | Jung and the Epic of Transformation Volume 3 Nietzsche’s “Thus Spoke Zarathustra” and the Challenge of Transformation
by Paul Bishop
Releasing May 25
This is the third volume in a series of books, examining key texts in German literature and thought that were, in Jung’s own estimation or by scholarly consent, highly influential on his thinking. The project of Jung and the Epic of Transformation consists of four titles, sequentially arranged to explore great works from a Jungian perspective and in turn to highlight their importance for interpreting The Red Book. |
| | | Keith’s Book: A Love Story
by Linda Schierse Leonard, Ph.D., & Bill G. Morris
Releasing June 1
Keith’s Book: A Love Story is a captivating fictionalized memoir about the love story of the celebrated Jungian Analyst and best-selling author, Linda Schierse Leonard, with her soulmate, psychiatrist Dr. Keith Chapman–– a compelling true-love story that provides life-changing insights into the psychological experiences, successes, harms, and survival of lives touched by alcoholism, while searching for love, beauty, and soul on the quest for spiritual meaning.
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