If you read Kalsched's Trauma and the Soul, this book delves even deeper into the resiliency, or not for some, of the human spirit, and how our psyches survive such atrocities as the Holocaust and current invasive traumas such as torture, genocide and other violent experiences. Although not exclusively writing from the viewpoint of these experiences, Wirth's therapeutic research and work focuses on how we heal from trauma and what are the mysteries of this transformation of healing that happens in the therapeutic experience. Any therapeutic work with trauma will have to define and redefine the meaning of life, existential questions of being, and the idea of "God." Wirth very expertly and in digestible prose addresses each of these facets of transformation within the methods of trauma therapy. Although mostly utilizing a Jungian framework which aptly lends itself to the process, other methods, theories and frameworks from esteemable practitioners is incorporated and explored. If you are exploring your own healing, a therapist hoping to delve deeper into your practice with clients or a student needing a respite from the tedious CBT point of view, this is a must read and like Kalsched's work, will hopefully be indispensable to the work of trauma therapy.