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The Art of Loving | 
enlarge | Author: Erich Fromm Publisher: Harper Perennial Modern Classics Category: Book
List Price: $13.95 Buy New: $7.83 You Save: $6.12 (44%)
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Rating: 74 reviews Sales Rank: 12266
Media: Paperback Edition: 15 Anv Pages: 176 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3 Dimensions (in): 7.8 x 5.2 x 0.6
ISBN: 0061129739 Dewey Decimal Number: 152.41 EAN: 9780061129735 ASIN: 0061129739
Publication Date: December 1, 2006 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Condition: 100% Brand New! - Ships Today! Identical to Amazon's book in every way. Flawless! Not a cheap Remainder or Book Club Copy! *We recommend Expedited Shipping option for much faster mail delivery
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Product Description
The renowned psychoanalyst Erich Fromm has helped millions of men and women achieve rich, productive lives by developing their hidden capacities for love. In this astonishly frank and candid book, he explores the ways in which this extraordinary emotion can alter the whole course of your life. Most of us are unable to develop our capacities for love on the only level that really counts––a love that is compounded of maturity, self–knowledge, and courage. Learning to love, like other arts, demands practice and concentration. Even more than any other art it demands genuine insight and understanding. In this startling book, Fromm discusses love in all its aspects; not only romantic love, so surrounded by | conceptions, but also love of parents for children, brotherly love, erotic love, self–love, and love of God.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 69 more reviews...
A Classic December 3, 2008 Deborah Everyone should read this book. It resonates at a very deep level in the human psyche. Love as a self-directed activity instead of the "whats in it for me" mentality is huge. Current American thinking is the exact opposite of what Fromm was trying to say about love being a self-directed activity. The books explanations show the reader why our current culture is so miserable, thankless and disloyal. We are taught to love passively instead of actively and its progressing more toward self-centerness everyday.I highly recommend this book, especially if you are sick of being miserable.
Erich Fromm August 10, 2008 The Purple Bee (USA) This author is amazing. His insight from back in the 30's- 50's is really incredible. A perceptive and great writer. I enjoy his work. This book is very special because it the first one I read of his. I've given this book to many friends. Highly recommended.
To Live is to Love January 7, 2008 E. Riego (Miami, Florida) 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
"Most people see the problem of love primarily as that of being loved, rather than that of loving, of one's capacity to love. Hence the problem to them is how to be loved, not how to love." -Eric Fromm, The Art of Loving I picked up this book by chance at the Miami Dade County Book Fair. I had heard of Fromm briefly in my psychology class, and thought this little book (the actual text not more than 130 pages) would be a great companion to another book I picked up on love in Shakespeare's plays. Judging by his background psychology, I prepared myself for The Art of Loving to turn out like many other psychoanalytic books tend to be: a small book that would take an unimaginable amount of time to read. However, it was quite the contrary; what I encountered in this small book was an eye-opening experienced that made me aware of both my accomplishments and my failures in life. I found myself reading the book from cover to cover, flipping it over and starting again. As I read (and reread) the book felt like Fromm was talking directly to me, as if he and I were sitting down and having an in-depth conversation on love's role in my life. Fromm touches on all forms of love from parental love, to brotherly (neighborly) love, to erotic love, to love of God, and to self love, which he specifically explains is very different from narcissism. He speaks of the problem in the Western world's concept of love as a temporary gratification and a purely selfish act and discusses how to rectify it by attempting to invert what is seen and practiced in the world by learning to live in love, hinging it on the art of giving of oneself. However, do not expect, as Fromm states in the first section of this book, that you will find a step by step guide on `how to love'. This book is more of an awareness of what love is and how humanity does not love. It very much reveals yourself to yourself, and shows you how love is verb not a noun (thus an art and not a name). It is something you have to do constantly, not wait for it to come to you. As Fromm says, "What are the necessary steps in learning any art? One, mastery of the theory; two, mastery of the practice." For Fromm love is the answer to human existence and one must first learn to love oneself before he can attempt to love others. It is a self-changing experience.
A Master Work November 9, 2007 mackey (Wabash, Indiana United States) This book was very impressive and I learned a lot about the subject of love and myself. It would be nice if every couple who are deciding to get married would read this book. If they did, perhaps they would understand going in that there is a lot more to it than 'what is in it for me.' Perhaps the sad divorce rate in our country would dissipate some extent. This book belongs on the top shelf with the other books I consider master works. I plan on reading the rest of Fromm's works.
This Book Changed My Life! November 8, 2007 William J. Trinkle (Walnut Creek, CA United States) I read Erich Fromm's book many years ago, when I was in college in the late 60s/early 70s. It subtantially changed the way I viewed the world and to today influences what I believe and do. I just bought a copy of the volume for my daughter who is working her way into adulthood, on the hope that it can help her the way it helped me. I don't think there is any other work I have recommended to others more in my life and I recommend it to you. It is a short, wise book. William J. Trinkle----
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