List Price

$16.00

Textbook Details

  • ISBN:
    0449907325
  • ISBN-13:
    9780449907320
  • PUB. DATE:
    May 1992
  • PUBLISHER:
    Random House Publishing Group
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Flock: The Autobiography of a Multiple Personality by Joan Frances Casey, Lynn Wilson (With)

$16.00 List Price
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Customer Reviews

Flock: The Autobiography of a Multiple Personalityby Anonymous

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The flock Casey refers to is the flock of personalities that resides within her. Likened to the cooperation a flock of birds experience to fulfill a collective goal. Casey leads us through her flight from walking a tightrope in the daily struggles of life to the flight of integration she migrated into. With the help of not only a very devoted therapist who practiced reparenting to an extreme by having...

Flock: The Autobiography of a Multiple Personalityby Anonymous

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The book will "hook" you immediately! This book was absolutely fascinating!!

Overview -

Flock

Product Details

  • Pub. Date: May 1992
  • Publisher: Random House Publishing Group
  • Sales Rank: 197,756

Synopsis

"This is the first coherent autobiographical study of its kind, and it is absolutely mesmerizing....Simply not be be missed."
THE DETROIT NEWS When Joan Frances Casey "awoke" on the ledge of a building ready to jump, she did not know how she had gotten there. And it wasn't the first time she had blanked out. She decided to give therapy another try. And after a few sessions, Lynn Wilson, an experienced psychiatric social worker, was shocked to discover that Joan had MPD—Multiple Personality Disorder. And as she came to know Joan's distinct selves, Lynn uncovered a nightmarish pattern of emotional and physical abuse, including rape and incest, that nearly succeeded in smothering the artistic and intellectual gifts of this amazing young woman.

Publishers Weekly

In this extraordinary, convincing account of her psychological fragmentation and arduous journey toward wholeness, the pseudonymous Casey displays the impulse toward health that seems a driving force of nature. She begins her story, with all names and locations changed, at the University of Chicago, where, as a graduate student, she sought counseling in 1981. Unlike Casey's previous experiences of quick-fix therapy, this time the psychotherapist, Wilson, proved a sensitive listener. Casey soon revealed her secret names, marking different selves with distinct memories and, as observed by Wilson, distinct voices, postures and expressions. Originally opposed to Wilson's diagnosis of Multiple Personality Disorder, Casey embraced it during her struggles over the four-year course of intensive therapy, through stages of cooperation, opposition and even sabotage among selves that included the competent Renee, scholar Joan, self-destructive Josie, self-possessed Kendra and Rusty, a boy. Wilson's interspersed notes, covering her concerns as she extended therapy beyond the office and included her husband, a high school teacher, in the ``reparenting'' of each of Casey's personalities, offer a balancing perspective. Deftly told and studded with striking images, Casey's story--distinguished by her intelligence and courage and by Wilson's unremitting patience and compassion--witnesses equally the power of cruelty and indifference to damage children profoundly, and the capacity of love and hard work to heal. Casey is now a university professor. Literary Guild alternate. (May)

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