The book was fairly straightforward and filled with several nice stories to frame up the situation and diverse nature of handling RJ in a college or university setting. Like all of the Little Book series works, it's nothing more than an introductory guide...which I happen to feel is something too many authors and publishers neglect now days. Still, a person reading it should not think they could start a college/university-based RJ program just using this book as the sole guide.
I would have given the book five stars had it not been for a fundamental flaw which almost made me throw down the book and not read any more. In Restorative Justice, there is this segment which uses pseudo-Native American elements to promote an idea. They often throw around the term "Native American" but never tell the tribe(s), areas of the country (i.e., Plains Tribes vs Southeastern Woodlands Tribes), or any other identifiers to give credibility. So, as a Native American, I get offended by this since a great deal is either fabricated or so broadly painted that it wrongly depicts Native American life an beliefs.
In this book, I found the same thing happening a bit with a "medicine wheel." Dr. Karp came up with a very valid line of thought and then he shrouded it with the New Age "crystal Twinkie" nonsense of a medicine wheel to give the illusion of spirituality and mindfulness. It was a good line of thought! Why taint a good idea by cloaking it in New Age nonsense which actually works to belittle a minority group's identity?
Now, I have been fortunate enough to meet Dr. Karp. He seems like a great guy. I love his writing style and think he has done much to help a lot of people while also furthering the RJ cause. I just think he needs to let his good ideas stand on their own. They have far greater merit to them than what he is allowing them to get credit for.
All-in-all, it is a sound book full of great stories, ideas, and a plain-languaged approach to how a college/university RJ program may play out. For those who haven't a clue how to get started or where to go with such a program, this book is a great introductory piece. Affordable and easy to read, it could be used as a training text.