This textbook takes a slightly unusual approach. Rather than having a single author write all about Comparative Politics, the editor, Daniele Caramani, calls on top experts in various niches of the discipline to write short chapters on a variety of specific subjects within the field. This allows for a plethora of perspectives, but also for her to dial up cutting-edge thinkers in each research area.
The book begins with several chapters on research methods. For those who are not political scientists or don't hope to conduct research in this field, this section is probably the dullest. After that, things get more interesting with groupings of chapters on the historical context of comparative politics, political structures and institutions, political actors and processes, policy making and trends, and a final few chapters dealing with trans-national politics. I found the material relatively accessible, and very enlightening. As a relative novice in this area of study, I learned a lot.
The book does display a certain amount of unevenness. Because not all of the authors are writing in their primary language, the style and quality of the writing varies; I found some grammatical errors and odd turns of phrase that obscured meaning at times. Also, although a broad range of nation-states are used to illustrate specific points, countries in Asia and Africa remain underrepresented.
Still, this text feels like a good primer on a subject that likely appears opaque to many of us. For those wrapped up in the messiness or ugliness of their own governmental system (e.g. the United States or the UK), understanding some of the variety of political approaches used around the world can be refreshing. It's a reminder that there is more than one way to make the sausage.