Author | Judith Rossner |
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Cover artist | Fred Marcellino |
Language | English |
Publisher | Houghton Mifflin |
Publication date | 1983 |
Publication place | United States |
Media type | Print (Cloth, Paper) |
Pages | 376 (Cloth) |
August, is a novel written by Judith Rossner focused on a psychoanalyst and one of her analysands. The title refers to the month of August, when analysts leave the city for the month and thus leave some of their patients without the emotional support of the analytic relationship.
The novel focuses on the relationship between a psychoanalyst, Dr. Lulu Shinefield, and a troubled young woman, Dawn Henley, from the beginning of their therapy together through to its termination.
The New York Times reviewer Walter Kendrick praised the book for "almost photographic realism" in showing life on Manhattan's Upper West Side and in East Hampton, as well as its depiction of the relationship between analyst and patient. The reviewer concluded, "I know of no other account, imagined or factual, that gives such a vivid picture of the analytic experience, on both sides of its intense, troubled, ambiguous relationship."[1] Norman N. Holland, in his 1990 Holland's Guide to Psychoanalytic Psychology and Literature-and-Psychology, wrote that August, though a "pop novel", provided an "accurate picture of a New York psychoanalysis today" and "a fascinating study of separation anxiety".[2] UPI reviewer David R. Schweisberg likewise credited the book's writing and its portrayal of psychology, but he felt that Rossner had pursued "realism and nuance at the expense of leaving the reader behind", making the book "boring".[3]