"Creatures of a Day is just what the doctor ordered!"--Abraham Verghese, author of Cutting for Stone
A remedy more powerful than any fad or pill could promise."--Washington Post
"Poignant and bracing."--Los Angeles Review of Books
"These individual accounts of emotional challenges and resolutions--from a man ashamed of his hoarding to a woman with a terminal cancer diagnosis--shine a brilliant light on what it means to be human and to need help."--Daniel Menaker, author of The Treatment and My Mistake: A Memoir
"Irvin Yalom has produced a book of such piercing depth that to enter into it is transformative. You feel less like you are reading Creatures of a Day than that it is reading you."--Rebecca Newberger Goldstein, McArthur Fellow and author of Plato at the Googleplex and Betraying Spinoza
"Dr. Yalom has written a magical book. Anyone who has ever thought about his or her own aging or mortality will love this book."--George Valliant, professor of psychiatry, Harvard University, and author of Triumphs of Experience and Aging Well
"Yalom sees the therapist as a poet. He sees therapy as an art. And he sees his clients as fellow poets, working the high wire, along and with him."--Patrick T. Reardon, Chicago Tribune
"This book is the best of its kind I've read to date, offering a tender and credible look behind the curtain, through a powerful series of vignettes."--Miranda Palmer, PsychCentral
"[Yalom] writes amiably, certainly sympathetically, and always wisely from his point of view as an octogenarian therapist who has seen it all--well, maybe almost all--and how has some useful thoughts about the mysteries of the mind.... A humane, highly knowledgeable glimpse of the therapist's couch."--Kirkus Reviews
"This book will inspire therapists at any stage along with lay readers intrigued by the psyche, relationships, and the possibilities of change."--Library Journal, starred review
"Yalom has genuinely inspiring insights to share about the value of therapy.... The stories [he] offers of his patients' failures and triumphs are frequently moving and will invoke the reader's empathy."--Publishers Weekly