Abstract: are included, speech rehabilitation and nutritional concepts are detailed, radiation therapy is analyzed exten¬ sively, and dental and prosthodontic management, together with general rehabilitation, are given the suffi¬ cient space they deserve. Particularly pleasing are the whole-organ sagittal and coronal pho¬ tomicrographs accompanying the ex¬ tensive chapter on the larynx, where tumor growth in different dimensions can lead to a wide variety of impor¬ tant clinical differences. These sec¬ tions beautifully illustrate anatomic concepts elaborated in the text and should be of particular benefit to pathologists and radiologists who so often see but a customary two-dimen¬ sional image or slide and have diffi¬ culty relating to the tightly arranged anatomy of this region. A full-color vertical, whole-organ photomicro¬ graph wherein relations of the base of the tongue, epiglottis, cartilages, and adjacent spaces can be shown on a half page is alone worth the price of the book for the student or clinician in this field. Scientific writing is too often want¬ ing in style. Such is, happily, not the case here. Million and Cassisi know how to turn a phrase, as well as to present data to prove a point. This means that such a joint effort must have indeed been a great deal of hard work. But the result is well worth it. In style and format, in illustration and graphics, and particularly in the overall connectedness of the whole, the authors and publisher have pro¬ duced a work sure to become a classic. It sets a standard that challenges workers in other areas of cancer. Perhaps, above all, it shows what a true multidisciplinary approach be¬ tween surgeon and radiation thera¬ pist can achieve.