Elizabeth F. Loftus
president of the American Psychological Society
author of The Myth of Repressed Memory
"Lost Daughters skillfully weaves moving, tragic first-person stories with astute evaluations of scientific and social evidence and makes a convincing case that some psychotherapy practices are catastrophically misguided. Van Til does all this with a hard look at current cultural trends but also with compassion for the genuine victims of abuse, whose suffering is all too often equaled by that of the falsely accused."
Stephen J. Ceci
Cornell University
"In the battle between victims whose allegations of abuse are not believed and defendants whose innocence is not believed, Van Til's Lost Daughters reminds us of the horrific costs paid by both sides. In heart-wrenching chapter after chapter, Van Til exposes the underbelly of the recovered memory movement, giving readers an unusually graphic and well-written glimpse into the shattered lives on both sides of this battle."
Paul C. Vitz
author of Psychology as Religion
"A dramatic but all too accurate portrayal of how psychology, particularly in its popular forms, can itself be a form of abuse."