I have been slowly re-reading the required texts from my Masters program, and this book was part of this journey. Originally, I read parts of it for a theory class (I think?) but now that I have actual therapy experience under my belt, I found it far more useful. It is straightforward and provides a good basic understanding of what makes narrative therapy unique. It also makes the same assumptions that many other therapy texts do, which is to assume the reader (likely a therapist) comes from a privileged background. Even as it extolls the benefits of creating space for clients' own narratives, it does not consider the effects of the therapist's own placement and identity within our society and culture as relevant to the process. I would argue that it is, and that it is an important point to consider as it can and often does affect the client's meaning-making process.