<p><span style=background-color: rgba(247 247 247 1); color: rgba(102 102 102 1)>Charlotte Schwartz has continued her thinking and writing&nbsp;in the tradition of Freud and classical psychoanalysis. Though she has differed with Freud regarding the Death Drive and has emphasized the Aggressive Drive as a preferable observable second&nbsp;drive she follows in his tradition of drive focus and description&nbsp;in her writings. In her paper&nbsp;Frequency of Sessions she presents how the intensity&nbsp;of frequency makes possible increased insight and understanding of unconscious problems and conflicts for the patient. The patients' ability&nbsp;to internalize their experience to feel the transference wishes desires and&nbsp;affects&nbsp;in the analysis is obviously more pronounced in more frequent sessions than once or even twice weekly visits.</span></p><p><span style=background-color: rgba(247 247 247 1); color: rgba(102 102 102 1)>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Mrs. Schwartz&nbsp;further takes issue with those theorists who have malined Freud for his supposed failure to give credence to the object in the patient's lives and who&nbsp;stresses the role of drives particularly the sexual drive&nbsp;both in&nbsp;their internal conflicts and in psychic structure. In her paper Freud The Progenitor of Object Relations Theory she formidably stresses the role of the infantile object and its subsequent force throughout life in Freud's writings.</span></p><p><span style=background-color: rgba(247 247 247 1); color: rgba(102 102 102 1)>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;For those who wish a quick and in depth review of Freud's thinking on&nbsp;such topics as a Reconsideration of Topographic Theory Ambivalence Narcissism&nbsp;Superego Development and&nbsp;other psychoanalytic concepts Mrs Schwartz's book offers an opportunity to encounter.</span></p><p></p>