The book is structured in three parts: (1) the state of the client "but for" the brain injury, focussing on the premorbid state of the client preceding the injury; (2) the current condition of the client, focusing on issues including methodology, reliability, validity, dose-response relationships, the frontal paradox, and capacity, financial and litigation-related decision-making in brain injured clients; and (3) the final section of the book which focuses on loss, disability and impact, including aspects relevant to the determination of the quantum both at a theoretical and practical level and culminating in a synthesis of all of the material presented throughout the book into a contemporary framework for medicolegal formulation. Neuropsychological Aspects of Brain Injury Litigation: A Medicolegal Handbook for Lawyers and Clinicians: Edited by Phil S Moore, Shereen Brifcani and Andrew Worthington Routledge, 2021, 254 pp., £39.99 (paperback), ISBN 9780367616274, 0367616270 Charles and Johnson's introductory chapter on legal principles and litigation surveys the legal context for the dispute and explores how the neuropsychological evidence fits within this. [Extracted from the article]