For teaching cultural anthropology at a Christian university or seminary, this book does a really good job of covering the bases. It surveys different areas of inquiry in cultural anthropology, and it gives students an idea of how cultural anthropology can be useful in various professional fields. It is a survey of the discipline, not a practical guide for application. Though it's not the juiciest morsel of reading you will ever assign, it does set up the basic cultural anthropology framework well.
How will I use this book? I teach people who are seeking to develop intercultural skill for service, ministry, or business. My students are not heading into anthropology as an academic field. The first and last chapters are a bit redundant for them, so I will have my students only skim those. In fact, my students will probably end up skimming 2/5 of the book, which will help them get an idea of the concepts without being bogged down by the details. I will need to come up with ways to apply some of the information and topics to here-and-now peoples and situations. For example, what do the chapters on kinship and economic systems have to do with intercultural ministry here in the US today or business partnerships overseas? The authors do touch on ethnographic research principles, but considering the centrality of ethnography to cultural anthropology, I wish they would have devoted an entire chapter to it.
It's a useful intro text that provides a credible survey.