At first glance, I thought this volume promised an exposition of the range of psychosocial interventions for the severely mentally ill, such as were recently reviewed by Drake and colleagues (1). Perusal of the index of Treating Chronic and Severe Mental Disorders: A Handbook of Empirically Supported Interventions suggested I might have been correct in my assumption, given that several chapters have been written by highly respected researchers, even luminaries, in the field of psychological treatments for this population. Ian R. H. Falloon writes on cognitive-behavioral family therapy and about his work on expressed emotion and family education in the treatment of schizophrenia and related illnesses. Sarah Pratt and Kim T. Mueser address social skills training; Gerard E. Hogarty, personal therapy; Nicholas Tarrier and Gillian Haddock, cognitive-behavioral therapy for schizophrenia; David J. Miklowitz, family-focused therapy for bipolar disorder; Teresa Whitehurst, Maria Elena Ridolfi, and John Gunderson, multiple family groups for borderline personality disorder; and Kelly Koerner and Marsha M. Linehan, dialectical behavior therapy.