Steven A. Carter

This article is about the American author of non-fiction. For other people with a similar name, see Steve Carter (disambiguation).
Steven A. Carter
Born Steven Andrew Carter
October 23, 1956
New York City, New York
Occupation author
Nationality American
Genre non-fiction, self-help, humor
Subject relationships, psychology, health

Steven A. Carter (born October 23, 1956) is an American author of non-fiction, self-help and humor.

A distinguished graduate of Cornell University, member of the Quill and Dagger society, and winner of the William K. Kennedy Dean's Prize for extraordinary academic achievement, Steven A. Carter also holds a Master's Degree in Education and a Master's Degree in Psychology.

Steven Carter was born in New York City and raised in New Hyde Park, New York. He is the author of 27 books, including the New York Times bestseller Men Who Can't Love (with co-author Julia Sokol) and seven other National Bestsellers. More than ten million copies of his books are in circulation worldwide. Carter coined the phrase "Commitmentphobia" in 1987 and is recognized as one of the foremost authorities on the subjects of commitment, fear of commitment, attachment disorders, and narcissistic personality disorder. He has also been a ghostwriter of various works of humor and non-fiction.

Books and other writing

Steven Carter's most popular books include:

All of the above titles were co-authored with Julia Sokol. Carter and Sokol's first book on commitmentphobia, Men Who Can't Love, was an instant bestseller after Carter's first appearance on The Oprah Winfrey Show in 1987 (Carter appeared on the show five times between 1987 and 1997). Men Who Can't Love gained even more popularity when it was featured in the film When Harry Met Sally, and later, in the Julia Roberts/Brad Pitt/James Gandolfini film The Mexican. The book has been translated into 25 languages, selling more than four million copies worldwide. Men Who Can't Love had its last on-screen appearance in the Katherine Heigl/Gerard Butler film The Ugly Truth (July 2009).

In the winter of 2007 What Smart Women Know was released in Brazil by Editora Sextante, the publishing company founded by brothers Marcos and Tomas Pereira. What Smart Women Know spent 110 weeks on Brazil's top-ten bestseller lists, at one point being the #2 selling book in all of Brazil. Men Like Women Who Like Themselves was released in mid-2008 and spent 45 weeks on Brazil's bestseller lists. The Brazilian edition of Men Who Can't Love was released by Editora Sextante in late 2009, followed by The Secrets of Smart Women in May 2010 and How to Make Love Work in September 2011. Editora Sextante has sold over two million copies of these Carter/Sokol titles in Brazil since the first release. AvonBrasil (a division of Avon Products) contracted with Editora Sextante to produce five "Special Edition" Avon titles. Editora Sextante is best known in Brazil for their publication of various works by Augusto Cury, the Dalai Lama and, most recently, Paulo Coelho. In September 2011, Carter was an Honored Guest at the Bienal do Livro in Rio de Janeiro, invited by President Dilma Rousseff to celebrate Brazil's 'Year of the Woman.'

Prior to beginning his career as an author, Steven Carter was the Director of Tennis at the world-renowned Little Dix Bay Hotel in the British Virgin Islands, and Head Tennis Pro at the Dorado Beach Resort in Dorado Beach, Puerto Rico. His early work references those years in the Caribbean. Carter has also written extensively about the stages of growth he has experienced through more than twenty years of his own deeply personal work in psychotherapy, and he is a powerful advocate for both individual and group therapy.

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