This is the theoretical text Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick prescribed for the course she taught on Proust, and also one of the two books whose “persuasive paraphrase” of Klein’s work she credits with having “dramatically punctuat[ed]” her enduring attraction to it (the other being R.D. Hinselwood’s A Dictionary of Kleinian Thought). While I can see its curricular value, its ability to vividly animate Kleinian objects relations is totally lost on me. Sentence by sentence this is not a challenging read and you can easily speed through it. But it’s as dry as sawdust—so much so that, somewhat paradoxically, even as the pages fly by it can still feel like a total slog, which has undoubtedly inhibited my level of retention too. Though clearly intimate with Klein’s writings and influences, Likierman is not in the least rhetorically gifted. Not a terrible primer, all told, but an unlively one, to be sure (which, I suppose as far as primers go, is hardly a unique offence).