"This book focuses on a neglected area of family connections: the psychological implications of having one or more sisters. Sue Kuba succeeds in bringing it to the fore and inserting it in traditional theoretical interpretations that have previously all but ignored this significant area of women's experience. The methodology makes vivid the experiences of sisters by using their words to describe the subtle and complicated emotions that circulate among sisters.This is a unique contribution to women's psychology, one that was long overdue. Clinicians will find useful information for their work in this book. But, in addition, any woman who has a sister willsee herself in these pages and will understand better the significance of her sister in her own life." --Oliva M. Espin, Ph. D., Professor Emerita, Department of Women's Studies, San Diego State University"Dr. Kuba expertly explores the largely unexamined role of sisters on women's lives and identities. The women's accounts of their herstories, gathered in the research, vividly reveal the depth, diversity, commonalities, and enduring nature of sister relationships and their potential to heal, hurt, shape personality, and promote growth. Therapists will highly value Dr. Kuba's use of the research findings to elaborate theories on women's development and toillustrate how the sister relationship can be utilized as a healing force." --Mary Beth Kenkel, Ph.D., Dean and Professor, College of Psychology and Liberal Arts, Florida Institute of Technology"A significant contribution to the study of women's development, this book not only highlights the importance of the sister role, it also reveals that issues such a birth order, age spacing, family complex and gender have a tremendous impact on women's sense of identity. Kuba demonstrates that a better understanding and integration of the sister relationship and its role in the development of women can enhance women's lives and the therapies that are utilizedto assist them."--Elizabeth Davis-Russell, Ph.D., President and Professor of Psychology, Tubman University, Liberia, West Africa"This book should certainly be of value to clinical psychologists. For me, as well as for others studying sibling relationships in the areas of developmental psychology, sociology, and family studies, the book demonstrates how important it is to go beyond questionnaires and scales to assess the sibling relationship and to examine the unbiased qualitative narratives of those actually experiencing the relationship in question. Finally, any reader of The Role of Sisters in Women's Development will come away with a greater understanding of the complexity and meaning of relationships between sisters. I certainly found this to be the case." -- Victor Cicirelli, PhD, Department of Psychological Sciences at Purdue University, PsycCRITIQUES"Through her richly detailed descriptions of relationships between sisters, Sue Kuba offers an intimate portrait of women's development across the lifespan... As is The Role of Sisters in Women's Development reflects Kuba's stated goals and will be a useful resource for clinicians and graduate students, especially those interested in the psychological development of women or family process... In sum, Kuba's book would serve well as an additionallibrary resource for feminist researchers, students in women or gender studies programs, and graduate students in clinical or family psychology programs." -- Lisa Fortlouis Wood, PhD, Psychology of Women Quarterly