This is a solid, but moderately confusing collection of the writings of Wittgenstein. The book is divided up into chapters which include text written by Wittgenstein, but none of it is explicitly labeled source-wise; i.e. the only texts that are included in full are TLP, and his 1929 Lecture on Ethics; while this is understandable (the rest of his writing is daunting in its length for sure), it becomes misleading to read selections from the middle of the Investigations, Zettel, and the Big Typescript, all out of context (e.g. chapter 14 of this edition). As a writer who can, I think, only be understood in context--and certainly Wittgenstein himself made a rather large fuss about contexts... language-games anyone?--the combining of works in this way is likely to end in some confusion. To the uninitiated, the division of his topics into chapters will be initially helpful, but I urge you, if you really want to understand what is going on, to read the whole of the source material. The soundbites that can be found here may be nice quotable bits, but for real understanding, this anthology sincerely falls short.