Journal May 2026 Release_Full Edition - Flipbook - Page 25
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experiences as a young man of strength, leadership, and courage.
Stimulating books and articles
Carlson, T. S. (1997). Using art in narrative therapy: Enhancing therapeutic
possibilities. The American Journal of Family Therapy, 25, 271-283.
Duckworth, E. (1996). The having of wonderful ideas. Teachers College Press.
Epston, D. & White, M. (1992). Experience, contradiction, narrative & imagination.
Dulwich Centre Publications.
Epston, Marsten, D., Epston, D., & Markham, L. (2016). Narrative therapy in
wonderland: Connecting with children’s imaginative know-how. W.W.
Norton & Company.
Freeman, J., Epston, D. & Lobovits, D. (1997). Playful approaches to serious
problems. W.W. Norton & Company.
Gallant, J.P. (1993). New ideas for the school social worker in counseling of
children and their families. Social Work in Education, 15(2), p.119-128.
Hamkins, S. (2014). The art of narrative psychiatry. Oxford University Press.
Morgan, A. (2000). What is narrative therapy? Dulwich Centre Publications.
Remen, N. (2006). Kitchen table wisdom: Stories that heal. Penguin Group.
Von Oech, R. (1986). A kick in the seat of the pants. Harper & Row.
White, M. (2007). Maps of narrative practice. W.W. Norton & Company.
White, M. (1989). Literate means to therapeutic ends. Dulwich Centre
Publications.
White, M. & Epston, D. (1990). Narrative means to therapeutic ends. W.W. Norton
& Company.
White, M. & Morgan, A. (2006). Narrative therapy with children and their families.
Dulwich Centre Publications.
“It’s Taken Care Of”: A Collaborative Effort by a Student and a Teacher to Keep Trouble out of the Classroom
Journal of Contemporary Narrative Therapy, May 2026 Release, p. 9-24.
www.journalnft.com