After a brief, lucid introductory chapter on practical guidelines in the conduct of pharmacological clinical practice, the book is organized by major diagnostic categories and special topics. The major diagnoses covered include depression, bipolar disorder, psychosis, anxiety, insomnia, and substance abuse. Overall, the chapters review the essentials of the disorders and their pharmacological management. Special topic chapters include geriatric psychopharmacology, pediatric psychopharmacology, psychotropic drug use in pregnancy, HIV-related psychiatric disorders, eating disorders, borderline disorders, and, finally, medicolegal psychopharmacology. The logic of some of these choices is not made clear; why have a chapter on psychopharmacology of HIV-related disorders and not of medically related psychiatric disorders? Why a chapter on borderline disorders and not personality disorders? Why a chapter on pregnancy and not one on a broader range of topics related to women? Much in the geriatric and pediatric chapters repeats what is said in other sections but also highlights specific guidelines appropriate to the age group discussed. The chapter on psychotropic drug use in pregnancy is succinct, current, useful, practical, and well referenced. The chapters on eating disorders and borderline disorder are excellent summaries but have very few references after 1994. The chapter on medicolegal psychopharmacology is pithy and practical.