logo
Wrong email address or username
Wrong email address or username
Incorrect verification code
Eric Maisel
Eric Maisel, Ph.D., widely regarded as America's foremost creativity coach, is the author of more than 40 books. His titles include Secrets of a Creativity Coach, Why Smart People Hurt, Making Your Creative Mark, Coaching the Artist Within, The Van Gogh Blues, Fearless Creating, Mastering... show more

Eric Maisel, Ph.D., widely regarded as America's foremost creativity coach, is the author of more than 40 books. His titles include Secrets of a Creativity Coach, Why Smart People Hurt, Making Your Creative Mark, Coaching the Artist Within, The Van Gogh Blues, Fearless Creating, Mastering Creative Anxiety, Creativity for Life, A Writer's Paris, A Writer's San Francisco, and many others.In addition to training creativity coaches, leading workshops nationally and internationally, and maintaining an individual creativity coaching practice, Dr. Maisel is in the forefront of the movement to rethink mental health. He writes the Rethinking Psychology blog for Psychology Today and among his books in this area are Rethinking Depression and Natural Psychology: the New Psychology of Meaning. Dr. Maisel leads Deep Writing workshops at workshop centers like Esalen, Kripalu, Omega, Hollyhock and Rowe and in locales like San Francisco, New York, London, Paris, Prague and Rome. His books have been translated into more than a dozen languages, he has conducted hundreds of interviews, and his print column "Coaching the Artist Within" appears monthly in Professional Artist Magazine.Dr. Maisel's websites are www.ericmaisel.com and www.naturalpsychology.net. He can be contacted at ericmaisel@hotmail.com.
show less
Eric Maisel's Books
Recently added on shelves
Eric Maisel's readers
Share this Author
Community Reviews
Autumn Lupin Books
Autumn Lupin Books rated it 7 years ago
It's almost pointless to read this book if you haven't read his Natural Psychology one, I imagine.
Rod Raglin
Rod Raglin rated it 9 years ago
Are writer’s born or made? Can anyone become a writer, specifically a writer of fiction, or is the proclivity to writing an innate characteristic? This is a question I often ask myself, particularly when participants in my creative writing circles ask for writing prompts or inquire where to find s...
The Reading Perusals of Rose Summers
The Reading Perusals of Rose Summers rated it 10 years ago
Quick review for a quick read. Oh wow, this turned out much better than I expected. A practical guide to character personality that tests your character in a series of 30 scenarios with extended questions. Granted, it takes a little bit of creative stretching because the scenarios may not fit your c...
Dusty Volumes
Dusty Volumes rated it 11 years ago
This is a difficult book to rate or review, not least because I generally have a hate-hate relationship with "self-help" books, and this one pushes too many of my wrong buttons (if it is indeed a book, and not purely a giant informercial for the author's "Natural Psychology"). But ... It also provid...
see community reviews
Need help?