This is a well-intended, albeit imperfectly edited, attempt to produce a college-level textbook on violent crime. The book's title does not quite convey this aim. While emphasizing the need to see the forest for the trees, much of the book consists of individual descriptions of studies—the bibliography is 20 pages long, but not all cited studies can be found in it—with rare summaries of take-home conclusions. In some cases, well-accepted concepts are not presented—for example, on child abuse, that younger children are at higher risk for death than older ones; that adult males are more likely to kill; and that the most common cause of death is head injury.