Edited by H. J. Kaufmann. Editorial Committee: R. Astley, G. Currarino, S. Dunbar, C. C. Faure, U. Rudhe, and F. N. Silverman. Cloth, $18.00. Pp. 353, with 319 illustrations on 237 figures and 6 tables. Chicago, 111., Year Book Med. Pub'rs., 1967. This first volume of Progress in Pediatric Radiology deals entirely with chest radiography in the child and infant. The articles are contributed by many experts in both Europe and the United States and are generally well written. The illustrations are good, although many of the Europeans use the positive image rather than the negative which is usually preferred in American texts. One minor inconvenience is the separation of some of the captions from their illustrations, which sometimes appear on separate pages. A special treatment article on Respiratory Distress Syndrome is written by Edward Singleton, M.D., with critiques by several other authorities. A paper on the Congenital Malformation of the Bronchi and Lungs by Hooshang Taybi, M.D., is comprehensive in its scope and should serve as a useful reference in this area. Neuhauser and Grisholm's review of Aspiration Pneumonias in Children describes the material in well illustrated and well organized fashion. Other articles relate to positioning and technic in children, radiation problems in the examination of the chest, segmental localization in the postero-anterior film, tracheography and bronchography, tomography, pulmonary angiography, delayed pulmonary maturation syndrome, pulmonary listerosis, Pneumocystis pneumonia, the thoracic cage, pulmonary effects of skeletal disease, sequestration, recurrent pulmonary disease, physical and chemical injuries to the respiratory tract. Although this book adds relatively little new material to the literature, it should serve a useful function as a concise, well illustrated survey of topics of current interest in pediatric chest radiography.