This book includes a plethora of information matched with illustrations to back it up. The table of contents in itself is advanced in its 3 pages. It is broken down into Creation Myths, Beginnings, Fertility and Cultivation, Gods and People, Gods and Animals, Visions in the End, and Gods and Pantheons. Each story is labeled as to which culture it belongs to, and it spans a variety of cultures such as: Egyptian, Chinese, Japanese, Native American (multiple different tribes), Aboriginal Australian, Greek, Norse, Sumerian, Finnish, Polynesian, West African, Serbian, Indonesian and more. It is a very thorough collection. The book begins with an explanation of what a myth is along with a map of the different places that they come from with notes on those cultures in the map. I really enjoyed this book, but it is definitely overwhelming at first. Students would need a very solid understanding of a table of contents and how to find the information that they want before reading this book. Probably older grades from 5th to high school could use this book. Students could do so many things with this book such as create a compilation of stories from one culture within the book, compile all of a certain type of story into a shorter report, compare and contrast the stories of a certain topic among the cultures, and create picture version of the stories to teach others.