In eight comprehensive sections, Arthur Zelman addresses the major types of issues that face practitioners who work with high-risk children. The categorizations are interesting: the first six sections are divided by situations in which children might find themselves (i.e., in disrupted, symbiotic/psychotic, or neglectful families; homeless; bereaved; in foster placement), and the last two sections focus on 1) ways in which individual practitioners can help institutions to assist multiply stressed children and 2) specific effective, research-tested methods of intervention.