The book regrettably does not have an author index, and the subject index has some surprising omissions—the words "culture," "transcultural," "cross-cultural," "catatonia" "hebephrenic," "paranoid," "schizoaffective," "mood disorders," or "affective disorders," for example, do not appear in the index. The absence of the some of these words is a reflection of the near absence of attention to differences of findings concerning the classical diagnostic subgroups counted under the general heading of schizophrenia. This decision can be defended in a variety of ways. I regret, however, that little attention was given to the contribution that epidemiology could make to the validation or invalidation of the nosological entities that have dominated clinical and therapeutic thinking of psychiatrists for at least a century.