Stadter's historical review is masterful: although it occupies the first third of the book, it is not an unreadable tour de force of all references but an apt sampling of what he calls "generations." The first generation includes Freud, Alexander, and French; the second, Malan, Davanloo, Sifneos, and Mann; the third, Horowitz, Strupp, and Binder, plus a pragmatic grouping of Balint, Winnicott, Bloom, Budman, and Gurman. Stadter's approach to personality disorders is aptly attenuated to his purpose, yet it is both clear and clinically sophisticated.