
This is essential reading for mothers, in psychotherapy or not, for fathers, and for therapists, including male therapists who will become better able to see women's bodies and motherhood from a woman's perspective."" Stanley Coen, M.D. She uncovers the roots of ambivalence, tells how it manifests in.

Her evocative clinical and literary stories make ambivalence a bit easier for mothers to bear. In this beautifully written book, Barbara Almond brings this troubling issue to light. This book is enormously useful to mothers, clinicians and anyone else interested in the psychology of motherhood.'Daphne de Marneffe, author of Maternal Desire: On. This book is enormously useful to mothers, clinicians and anyone else interested in the psychology of motherhood."" Daphne de Marneffe, author of "Maternal Desire: On Children, Love, and the Inner Life" ""Barbara Almond's book is a wonderful new resource for helping mothers, especially new mothers, to tolerate that love between them and their children must be burdened by resentment. Almond's fresh insights and perspectives regarding maternal ambivalence help us to become more comfortable with these feelings. She uncovers the roots of ambivalence, tells how it manifests in lives of women and their children, and describes a spectrum of maternal behaviorfrom normal feelings to highly disturbed mothering. Almond's fresh insights and perspectives regarding maternal ambivalence help us to become more comfortable with these feelings. In this beautifully written book, Barbara Almond brings this troubling issue to light. Chodorow, author of "The Reproduction of Mothering" """The Monster Within" is a gripping book. Almond Published 1 August 1998 Psychology, Art. Her expertly presented material provides the lively underpinning of this compelling book."" Nancy J. The monster within: Mary Shelleys Frankenstein and a patients fears of childbirth and mothering. "The Monster Within" presents richly nuanced and detailed cases that give the reader a sense of what these difficult feelings of ambivalence are, as they are experienced day to day, consciously and unconsciously. Barbara Almond, an experienced psychiatrist and psychoanalyst, shows us how and why this is so.

Such feelings are particularly scary for mothers, and Dr. This book is enormously useful to mothers, clinicians and anyone else interested in the psychology of motherhood.

""Psychoanalysis has always addressed the monster within: conflicts, fears, and those unacceptable feelings of anger, envy, and hatred with which we all grapple. Almond's fresh insights and perspectives regarding maternal ambivalence help us to become more comfortable with these feelings.
