"Women who run with the wolves" weaves an interesting link between storytelling and female psychology. Side stories, Clarissa Pinkola-Estes made a prodigious work of collecting and writing. Transmitted by family or gleaned from around the world, some tales are known as "Bluebeard" and other are more exotic like "Wassilissa the Wise." The analysis of these tales is exciting in itself but the goal is more ambitious. It is for each woman to find in it the "Wild Woman", that is to say the "so instinctual." Each must for that return to ancestral knowledge. But it must first free themselves from the formatting of society and connect with his instincts without which it will not have good reading keys.
The author's style is consistent with its dual expertise as a storyteller and Jungian psychoanalyst. Mi-graduate and mid-lyric, he is not without charm even if he sometimes seemed too chatty or even repetitive. Somewhat in the same way, the content of a side enlightened me and the other side seemed fairly indigestible.