The book includes some interesting comments about the illness, especially how poorly its sufferers are perceived by the press, family members, employers, and physicians. Some of the authors lament how they have been misunderstood victims and have suffered, but many of the accounts are interesting, demonstrate fine writing style, and convey an element of desperate persuasion. However, the rage of some of the authors is unconcealed and no different from that of many patients—past, present, and future—who feel ignored by the current health system and who may get a measure of relief from ventilation and "unionization." Support groups are an essential part of the medical landscape for these patients and can provide a link between the neglected and sick whose suffering is unappreciated by well-intentioned and bewildered health care providers.