The Craft of Family Therapy: Challenging Certainties by Salvador Minuchin


The Craft of Family Therapy: Challenging Certainties
Title : The Craft of Family Therapy: Challenging Certainties
Author :
Rating :
ISBN : 0415708117
ISBN-10 : 9780415708111
Format Type : Hardcover
Number of Pages : 234
Publication : First published January 1, 2013

Family therapy trainees are inundated with a multitude of family therapy theories. They also have difficulty shifting from an individualistic view to one of seeing interactions and systems. How do therapists hone their own methods with all of these choices? And how do they learn how to best treat families with all of the focus being taken away from their clients and redirected instead on processes? Perhaps most importantly, how can they learn through an inductive process of exploring what has occurred during the therapeutic session?
Veteran therapist and founder of Structural Family Therapy, Salvador Minuchin, goes back to basics with his two co-authors Michael D. Reiter and Charmaine Borda in The Craft of Family Therapy. In this book they teach readers basic communication and family therapy skills using some of Dr. Minuchin's most interesting and illuminating cases. Not only do readers re-learn basic techniques, such as reframing and joining, but they are treated to an in-depth commentary on each case, with Dr. Minuchin emphasizing the techniques he uses that allow him to refocus attention from the Identified Patient to the family as a whole. The book ends with three supervision transcripts from Dr. Minuchin's students, whose commentary illuminates the struggles, fears, and insecurities that new family therapists face and how they can overcome them. Each of these chapters ends with a consultation interview that Dr. Minuchin conducted with each supervisee's case family.


The Craft of Family Therapy: Challenging Certainties Reviews


  • Daniel

    This book made so much more sense after I had been a practicing therapist for a couple of years. A must read for those 2-3 years into their practice and/or a great companion for supervision.

  • Tim Nowotny

    I like the book although it does not dive into its theory too much. You get the foundations of family therapy and some contented case studies. Minuchin is brilliant and it’s a joy to look over his shoulder and see the inner workings of other practitioners. I just would have loved it if the book went a bit deeper in the craft aspect