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Escape from Babel: Toward a Unifying Language for Psychotherapy Practice (Norton Professional Books)


by Scott D. Miller, Barry L. Duncan, Mark A. Hubble

List Price: $32.00
Price: $25.60
You Save: $6.40 (20%)
Available: Usually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank: 62019
Studio: W. W. Norton & Company
Binding: Hardcover
Number Of Pages: 244
Publication Date: December 31, 1969
Publisher: W. W. Norton & Company


EDITORIAL REVIEWS

Product Description
W. Norton. Text on the universal truths of successful therapy: (1) respect for the client's point of view; (2) the importance of the therapeutic relationship; and (3) hope for the future. Maintains that all theories and models come second to these essential principles.


CUSTOMER REVIEWS (Average Customer Rating: 5.0 based on 5 reviews)

A Seminal Book On Psychotherapy  
Its been some years since I first read Escape from Babel, although I still tell people it is one of my favorite books describing what many now call the third wave of counseling. This is a book for counselors and therapists. Miller et. al. do this fabulous job of explaining how the idea of counseling has evolved from a deficit-based, modern operation to a client-centered, constructivist, outcome-oriented operation. The big difference: we as therapists are no longer in the driver's seat! It is the clients who are in charge of their own change! These guys show the research, write confidently and informedly, and they bring us along through their story to an end that leaves us motivated to change our practice. And, we shouldn't forget that this book has a companion book that reports on client stories that illustrate this books ideas. Overall, this is necessary reading for anyone who studies the evolution of change work. JN
December 22, 2007

Back to Basics.  
This book, drawing on current research findings and the authors' extensive clinical experience, reminds us that it's not the hottest new techniques or the therapist's theoretical orientation that makes for effective therapy. When satisfied clients are asked what made the the difference, their most frequent answer is a meaningful encounter with a caring, responsive human being whom the client felt understood his concerns and validated his strengths and resources. Many of us in the helping professsions seem to need this reminder. Phillip Ziegler, co-author of Recreating Partnership: A Solution-Oriented, Collaborative Approach to Couples Therapy.
April 14, 2002

What the world needs!  
I am especially glad to have stumbled upon Escape From Babel sooner rather than later in my career. In a most straightforward way it cuts to the chase about what it means to be a part of effective therapy; it reminds that clients (and their experiences) are nothing less than extraordinary when given the opportunity to have a role in their therapy; and it will encourage you to look again at the role of ethics in the profession. I encourage new and experienced therapists and therapists-in-training to absorb the messages in this book. Don't spend money on all the different "latest and greatest" technique books; this is a far more valuable investment!
June 24, 2000

Excellent summary of brief, solution oriented psychotherapy.  
This excellent text for counselors, social workers and psychologists covers the rationale, value and techniques of highly effective brief therapies. It is full of interesting and useful case examples that make the challenge of brief therapy dialog easy to learn and implement. I not only use it myself, but have insisted that the entry level counselors that I supervise buy a copy and become familiar with the techniques it describes. Jonathan Williamson, MA, LPC
December 31, 1998

Back to Basics  
This book, drawing on current research findings and the authors' extensive clinical experience, reminds us that it's not the hottest new techniques or the therapist's theoretical orientation that makes for effective therapy. When satisfied clients are asked what made the the difference, their most frequent answer is a meaningful encounter with a caring, responsive human being whom the client felt understood his concerns and validated his strengths and resources. Many of us in the helping professsions seem to need this reminder.
Phillip Ziegler, co-author of Recreating Partnership: A Solution-Oriented, Collaborative Approach to Couples Therapy.
June 18, 1997


SIMILAR PRODUCTS

The Heart & Soul of Change: What Works in Therapy
by Mark A. Hubble, Barry L. Duncan, Scott D. Miller

Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders DSM-IV-TR Fourth Edition (Text Revision)
by American Psychiatric Association

Interviewing for Solutions
by Peter De Jong, Insoo Kim Berg

The Heroic Client: A Revolutionary Way to Improve Effectiveness Through Client-Directed, Outcome-Informed Therapy
by Barry L. Duncan, Scott D. Miller, Jacqueline A. Sparks

Clinical Interviewing
by John Sommers-Flanagan, Rita Sommers-Flanagan

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