The weakness of the volume is its attempt, more prominent in some articles than others, to be so inclusive that psychosocial and developmental formulations are summarized in a paragraph or two. These factors are not given the depth of analysis or the elucidation from contemporary research that they, like the biological and endocrinological factors, deserve. For instance, in the chapter on "Growing Up Female," the section on self-concept and self-esteem has the usual, by now all-too-familiar references to Freud, Erikson, and Mahler, but it does not cite at all the extensive recent research literature on female adolescence and the development of the self.