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Stephen Grosz: telling tales from the consulting room

Compelling characters, surprise endings — the renowned psychoanalyst’s book is not the normal set of case histories

March 14, 2013 14:19
Grosz was reading Freud’s work at the age of 15. Photo: Bettina von Zwehl

BySimon Round, Simon Round

3 min read

There is something mildly thrilling about sitting in the consulting room of a famous psychoanalyst and asking him a few searching questions about how he feels about the success of his recent book and his motivations for writing it.

It is also fitting that we talk in the house in Hampstead where nearly all the action took place. The Examined Life is a series of 30 vignettes, taken from encounters that occurred between Stephen Grosz and his patients in the very room where we are sitting. The book was fought over by publishers and was serialised on Radio 4 — an unusual amount of attention for what is essentially a book about a set of clinical case histories.

But as American-born Grosz, explains, the tradition of setting down encounters with patients in readable story form goes back to Freud — and beyond. “The Jewish philosopher Gershon Sholem said that anything that can be talked about in a theoretical way can also be done in a story. I’m a great believer that anything, no matter how complicated and theoretical, that can be done in technical language, can be done better in a very simple story.”

Smiling, he adds: “Some more religious friends of mine do say that the stories read like the rabbi’s comments on a Torah portion. I don’t know how I feel about that.”