BOOKS DISCUSSED IN PART ONE OF THIS ESSAY
Norton, 101 pp., $1.45 (paper)
Houghton Mifflin, 307 pp., $6.00
International Universities Press, 396 pp., $12.50
Atheneum, 248 pp., $7.95
Grosset and Dunlap, 217 pp., $2.45 (paper)
Schocken, 396 pp., $3.45 (paper)
Dover, 382 pp., $2.50 (paper)
International Universities Press, 295 pp., $6.00
In a letter dated October 9, 1898, Freud made mention of Leonardo da Vinci: he was 'perhaps the most famous left-handed individual,' and he 'is not known to have had any love affairs.' The letter was one of many addressed to Wilhelm Fliess. As Freud step by step began to formulate what we know today as psychoanalysis, he turned to his friend to present his thoughts openly and with some passion, as if he needed to ask whether all those ideas made any sense or were hopelessly out of kilter—useless notions prompted by the disturbed minds a psychiatrist sees, not to mention his own dreams and fantasies, which he had relied upon rather significantly in The Interpretation of Dreams.
Review, 7564 words
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