This is one of the newer of the Popular Patristics series from St. Vladimir Press and contains several of St. Basil's moral and doctrinal sermons. The topics range from various virtues to a couple fairly technical sermons on the Trinity and various Trinitarian heresies. The introduction is an excellent one and gives a good understanding of St. Basil in his context. Each sermon has an introduction of its own to give context and, sometimes, some idea of the debates around authenticity. All in all, a strong scholarly effort.
That said, the only caveat I have on this volume is that it is such a grab bag of sermons. There is no guiding them nor was there in the original manuscript collection. Because I am who I am, I found the moral sermons more useful than the doctrinal ones. That is my own failing, of course, as I admit that I'm not the most philosophically minded person, so I find the Trinitarian theology baffling. That, of course, may be the point and one of the things I like about St. Basil and the other Cappadocians is that they would probably say that I'm not expected to understand it because no one really does. That, at least, is a comfort.
Well worth reading, although a high tolerance for ancient rhetoric and/or ancient philosophy is recommended.