Filled with information and resources designed to help you survive your first year as principal, this book can help you become a strong and effective leader.
If someone unfamiliar with the job read this, they would not know how deeply criticized, how time-intensive, how involved in community and state organizations, how lacking in work-life balance, a person in this position is. Perhaps this book would be useful to those who have few other commitments in their life when they enter the position, but I doubt there are many of those.
In my opinion, a beginners book like this should focus on negotiating (salary, staff, parent, and the like), organizing (keeping an organized file system, putting together an annual calendar with traditional events, having expected meetings, meeting layouts, evaluations), dealing (with criticism, traumatic events at the school/community, with a boss, with employees, time away from family), and financing (grants, budgets, professional development, book studies, saving towards a goal, selecting goals).
In some cases, yes, the book addresses a few of those, but not in a way that I felt truly mentored the reader.