Therapy with Troubled Teenagers: Rewriting Young Lives in Progress. - Review - book review

Adolescence, Fall, 1999

BERTOLINO, Bob. Therapy with Troubled Teenagers: Rewriting Young Lives in Progress. New York: John Wiley and Sons, 1999. 234pp. $45.00 (h).

Bertolino describes his approach to treating adolescents and their families. He applies possibility-oriented interventions that focus on eliciting, evoking, and highlighting the strengths of clients, as opposed to their pathology and deficits. This approach, which is collaborative, resource-focused, respectful, and generally brief, is an effective type of therapy for young people at this fragile stage of life. Bertolino begins the book by outlining the four common factors that can facilitate therapy and make a difference for both adolescents and their families. He discusses the importance of experience, stories, action, and context in therapy--the four domains that this type of approach to therapy encompasses--and explains why effective communication is crucial. The way we talk about problems, solutions, and possibilities can greatly influence the direction of therapy. Collaborative language is key because it opens up pathways with endless possibilities for young people who may feel that they have no escape f rom their troubles. Bertolino also offers advice on gaining a focus and establishing goals in therapy, two steps that are critical to making a difference. One of the last stages of the process is getting the adolescents to envision a future where things work out, and then planning the steps for making that vision a reality. The final part of the book presents a comprehensive case study, which illustrates the ideas and therapeutic principles presented in the book.

COPYRIGHT 1999 Libra Publishers, Inc.
COPYRIGHT 2001 Gale Group

 

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