Other than the aforementioned relatively minor quibble, this volume is quite helpful, if basic. In keeping with other offerings in this notable series, this text draws on the formidable resources of experts within this professional arena to describe how the human organism answers when stressed to the point of distress: chemically molecularly to group-wise; in adults and subadults; acute and chronic manifestations; and individual vulnerabilities and resiliences. In a readily accessible and logical manner, the ideas flow in a workmanlike way, touching on familiar concepts such as the notion that previously traumatized individuals will most likely be those most immediately requiring clinical intervention on exposure to fresh trauma and the assertion that the greater the global loss, the greater the injury to the population. The pragmatisms that chaos disrupts young children more than mature individuals and that family-focused interventions are most beneficial, although worth revisiting, are also not radical.