This is an excellent book outlining the importance of relational youth ministry through one-on-one discipleship and mentoring. It is also a very practical book that gives a very clear way to evaluate students in your youth ministry as to where they are in their spiritual journey and what is needed to connect with these students at each stage. He also provides practical ways for evaluating one's youth ministry itself when it comes to our effectiveness at connecting with students, and speaks frankly and clearly about the boundaries necessary in one-on-one discipleship between adults and teens.
If I read this book five years ago, I would be jumping up and down for joy, seeing it as an affirmation of what I always believed about youth ministry, and grateful for the new tips and ideas the book provided. But reading it in 2014, I came away more frustrated and angry than anything. Because, as much as Mckee provides an excellent chapter on boundaries and precautions, in the five years since this book was written much has changed. Lawyers and insurance companies have been taking over deciding how ministry should happen. Like all books of this nature, McKee provides many stories as examples of effective youth ministry. I haven't counted, but I would say that at least half, maybe three-quarters of his examples would now run afoul of my denomination's policies in some way.
That's not to say that his examples are bad. I think they are amazing. I agree with the author 100% that relational youth ministry and one-on-one connecting make all the difference in a young person's life. Schools are recognizing this in their mentoring programs. I just came away from reading this book with a sadness that this most effective ministry is being rendered all but impossible today by fear.