Available Formats
Loves Labour
By (Author) Stephen Grosz
Vintage Publishing
Chatto & Windus
4th October 2025
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Popular psychology
Psychoanalytical and Freudian psychology
Interpersonal communication and skills
Hardback
240
Width 138mm, Height 222mm, Spine 25mm
400g
Love hurts and love heals- the eagerly awaited new book about the pains and joys of love from bestselling writer and psychoanalyst, 'a combination of Chekhov and Oliver Sacks' (New York Times) The bestselling debut from psychoanalyst Stephen Grosz, The Examined Life, was about learning to live; his much-anticipated new book is about learning to love. Grosz reveals how to navigate the obstacles - the jealousies, grievances, boredom and betrayals - which can get in the way of two people falling, and staying, in love. From the woman who can't post her wedding invitations and then, decades later, can't decide whether to get divorced, to the man who struggles with feelings of guilt after his partner's death, to the couple who dread date night after thirty years of marriage- here are candid and surprising conversations from the consulting room. To love is to be vulnerable and be forever under threat from our desires. It is Grosz's unerring ability, as an analyst and a writer, to locate what hides behind the pain of heartsickness, and to help his patients and his readers reach new understandings of their own predicaments. The great task of life, and the great labour of love, is to see our self and others clearly - we have the capacity to be frustrating as well as generous, cruel as well as loving. But in surrendering to one we hope to love, we find we are not defeated, but more truly ourselves.
Stephen Grosz was born in Indiana and educated at Berkeley and Oxford. For the past twenty-five years he has worked as a psychoanalyst. He teaches at the Institute of Psychoanalysis and in the Psychoanalytic Unit at University College London. His stories have appeared in the Financial Times Weekend Magazine and Granta. He lives in London.