Ronald Pies has written a handbook of psychopharmacology that should please busy psychiatrists, who want quick answers, as well as those who would like more detail. He successfully walks the line between a presentation that is too simple and avoids controversial issues and a detailed presentation that marshals and critically analyzes the data in numbing profuseness. He has a unique strategy. Each chapter (covering antidepressants, antipsychotics, anxiolytics/sedatives, and mood stabilizers) starts with an overview covering, very briefly, topics such as indications, mechanisms of action, pharmacokinetics, side effects, interactions, potentiating maneuvers, and use in special populations. Following this he presents tables reviewing the same material in more detail. Then a question and answer format provides excellent and concise answers to pertinent questions. Finally, and most enjoyable, he has a set of "vignettes and puzzles" (e.g., a woman in good control of panic disorder with 0.5 mg of alprazolam t.i.d. adds carbamazepine for trigeminal neuralgia and has increased anxiety: why?).