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Jonathan Sure
Author
Poetic Injustice
A true story with names and details altered, Poetic Injustice is a tale of romance between a therapist and his patient resulting in profound insights that challenge almost all objectives of modern day therapy. Jonathan Sure a seasoned therapist intuitively aware of projected feelings in transference and counter-transference, is nonetheless lured into an intimate relationship with his patient, Kulai and finds himself drowning in an abyss of confusion, submission, and obsession. Feeling he is on the verge of healing a very complex case he goes beyond the boundaries of his profession in an attempt to penetrate and heal the soul of Kulai. But Mr. Sure realizes he is missing something, something he intuitively knows may be very important to this case. Does Kulai, a seemingly innocence patient, have a dark history that he is unaware of? Or has Mr. Sure lost touch with his own alter ego? There is an unexpected ending to this drama, and Mr. Sure comes to realize the true nature behind all human behavior as well as the key to healing. Mr. Sure explains his new found knowledge and teaches very simple techniques to the reader, which he believes hold the keys to healing and which he also believes have evaded almost all therapists in the field.
Reviews
This inspired-by-a-true-story account of a therapist-patient encounter gone wrong, penned by a retired licensed therapist, revolves around a fictionalized “Jonathan Sure” and his dealings with “Kulai," the wife of a doctor who had pleaded with Sure to take her case. Before he knows it, Kulai, in the course of her hypersomnia treatments, pulls Sure into a web of flirtations and recriminations, and he finds himself crossing boundaries he never imagined possible. “I believe it is our destiny to be lovers,” she says, during one session. Their destinies, in fact, prove messy: lives will be upended, accusations will fly, and Sure will face condemnation, suspension, and more.

The title conveys Sure’s feeling of betrayal, not just at the hands of Kulai, but the entire mental health industry. The book starts as a tale of percolating and forbidden romance, with vivid dramatizations of Sure and Kulai’s initial interactions setting the stage for a relationship. Grounding the story is the sure handed evocation of a therapist’s inner and working worlds, capturing the protagonist’s drift of mind, professional obligations, evolving understanding of his field’s practices and expectations. Much of Poetic Injustice’s back half becomes considerations, in essay form, of Sure’s treatment by his field itself; elsewhere, he includes poems written by the lovers, and appendices printing real documents, letters, and photos.

The result is a novel that suggests memoir and something like narrative therapy itself, a working through of an upsetting episode rather than a story meant to compel readers on its own. Scenes set in the therapist’s office, with professional and patient toying with crossing clear lines, are engaging like traditional fiction, especially in their nuanced attention to the job and its ethics. The poetry and the account of the fallout, meanwhile, offer readers less in terms of suspense or narrative momentum. Regardless, readers fascinated by the romance of transgressing professional boundaries may find this affecting in its rawness.

Takeaway: The inspired-by-truth story of a therapist’s condemnation after crossing lines with a patient.

Great for fans of: Susie Orbach’s The Impossibility of Sex, Sue Johnson’s Hold Me Tight

Production grades
Cover: A-
Design and typography: A
Illustrations: N/A
Editing: B
Marketing copy: B

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