?Sims (College of William and Mary) provides a no-frills, academic overview of human resource management, covering classic human resource topics such as organizational strategy, legal environment, job analysis, recruiting and selection, performance appraisals, career development, and labor relations. Each chapter discusses common principles, laws, or court cases--information that can be found in popular undergraduate human resource management textbooks such as Robert Mathis and John H. Jackson (10th ed., 2002), David DeCenzo and Stephen Robbins (7th ed., 2002), and R. Wayne Mondy, Robert Noe, and Shane Premeaux (8th ed., 2002). The main difference between Sims's book and the undergraduate texts is that it includes no corporate examples, glossaries, or pictures. Instead, Sims uses numerous refereed-journal references and court cases to discuss major human resource issues in detail. The human resource development chapter is characteristic of the rest of the book. Sims provides descriptions of various training methods and shows their advantages and disadvantages in a strategic management context. The strategic management context links an organization's mission, objectives, vision, and long- and short-term objectives to human resource activities. This context helps make this book suitable for graduate students and human resource practitioners.?-CHOICE