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Can Love Last?: The Fate of Romance over Time
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Can Love Last?: The Fate of Romance over Time in Franklin, TN
Current price: $19.99

Barnes and Noble
Can Love Last?: The Fate of Romance over Time in Franklin, TN
Current price: $19.99
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Size: Audiobook
"A beautiful and brilliant reexamination of love and its perils."—Barbara Fisher,
Boston Globe
Common wisdom has it that love is fragile, but leading psychoanalyst Stephen A. Mitchell argues that romance doesn't actually diminish in long-term relationships—it becomes increasingly dangerous. What we regard as the transience of love is really risk management. Mitchell shows that love can endure, if only we become aware of our self-destructive efforts to protect ourselves from its risks. "Those who read this book will love more wisely because of it."—Andrew Solomon, author of
The Noonday Demon
"[A] work on romance that is rich and multi-layered."—
Publishers Weekly
"Cheerful, open, and humane—you'd definitely have wanted him as your analyst."—Judith Shulevitz,
The New York Times
Book Review "[T]houghtful, compassionate, and profoundly optimistic."—JoAnn Gutin, Salon.com
Boston Globe
Common wisdom has it that love is fragile, but leading psychoanalyst Stephen A. Mitchell argues that romance doesn't actually diminish in long-term relationships—it becomes increasingly dangerous. What we regard as the transience of love is really risk management. Mitchell shows that love can endure, if only we become aware of our self-destructive efforts to protect ourselves from its risks. "Those who read this book will love more wisely because of it."—Andrew Solomon, author of
The Noonday Demon
"[A] work on romance that is rich and multi-layered."—
Publishers Weekly
"Cheerful, open, and humane—you'd definitely have wanted him as your analyst."—Judith Shulevitz,
The New York Times
Book Review "[T]houghtful, compassionate, and profoundly optimistic."—JoAnn Gutin, Salon.com
"A beautiful and brilliant reexamination of love and its perils."—Barbara Fisher,
Boston Globe
Common wisdom has it that love is fragile, but leading psychoanalyst Stephen A. Mitchell argues that romance doesn't actually diminish in long-term relationships—it becomes increasingly dangerous. What we regard as the transience of love is really risk management. Mitchell shows that love can endure, if only we become aware of our self-destructive efforts to protect ourselves from its risks. "Those who read this book will love more wisely because of it."—Andrew Solomon, author of
The Noonday Demon
"[A] work on romance that is rich and multi-layered."—
Publishers Weekly
"Cheerful, open, and humane—you'd definitely have wanted him as your analyst."—Judith Shulevitz,
The New York Times
Book Review "[T]houghtful, compassionate, and profoundly optimistic."—JoAnn Gutin, Salon.com
Boston Globe
Common wisdom has it that love is fragile, but leading psychoanalyst Stephen A. Mitchell argues that romance doesn't actually diminish in long-term relationships—it becomes increasingly dangerous. What we regard as the transience of love is really risk management. Mitchell shows that love can endure, if only we become aware of our self-destructive efforts to protect ourselves from its risks. "Those who read this book will love more wisely because of it."—Andrew Solomon, author of
The Noonday Demon
"[A] work on romance that is rich and multi-layered."—
Publishers Weekly
"Cheerful, open, and humane—you'd definitely have wanted him as your analyst."—Judith Shulevitz,
The New York Times
Book Review "[T]houghtful, compassionate, and profoundly optimistic."—JoAnn Gutin, Salon.com

















