This quick book illustrates the precepts, theory, and technique of narrative therapy, written by Alice Morgan, one of the early pioneers and forerunners of this model. I read it as a supplement to a course for continuing education credits. To me, narrative therapy is indistinguishable from good therapy, it doesn't have much unique to call its own. While narrative theorists and therapists would have a field day from my saying so, or would think I failed to grasp the nuances and basic tenets and precepts that make it different, I will continue to feel very much at home withe psychoanalytic psychodynamic movement. That to me feels like it gets at the heart of healing and transformation and the authentic self. Everything else feels somewhat simplistic and watered down to me. However, what is most poignant about Narrative therapy, is that it is about the stories we tell about our identities, our lives, our circumstances - and the premise is that we can re-author anew, forge a new relationship, an alternative story to our identities. And that there is healing and hope in the creation of something new. I am no stranger to storytelling, and neither are any of us. I think that premise is something we can all get behind - the importance of our stories and telling them in a way that makes us free to be our more authentic selves. Right on!