These sections provide a strong overview of the field. However, the authors have a difficult task in trying to provide a text with enough depth and sophistication to be both a legitimate review text and an introduction for students beginning their work in clinical psychiatry. The pull of these two tasks is evident in the initial chapters where case examples, such as a patient with borderline personality disorder, and psychological concepts, such as object relations theory and ego psychology, may leave some readers overwhelmed. This more advanced material is, however, balanced by an excellent discussion on interviewing, complete with examples of the types of questions to ask for the various disorders, that all students should find most helpful.