Gestalt Therapy (book)

Gestalt Therapy is a 1951 book that outlines an extension to psychotherapy, known as gestalt therapy, written by Fritz Perls, Ralph Hefferline, and Paul Goodman.

Presented in two parts, the first introduces psychotherapeutic self-help exercises, and the second presents a theory of personality development and growth.

The book is known in the gestalt community as "PHG".

[1] English literature professor George Levine thought of the book as the only emotionally engaging textbook he knew.

This article about a psychology book is a stub.

Paul Goodman during the late 1940s