This is a collection of numerous, short essays on various interpersonal issues that arise during the practice of spiritual direction. It is not an introduction to spiritual direction, nor does it focus on the spirituality or theology of the tradition. Anne Winchell Silver is an experienced counselor who became a spiritual director later in life; many of her competencies come from a lifetime of psychological and therapy-related experience, research, and education. I found it to be a very useful book, especially in regards to the handling of situations when a director feels the need to teach, rescue, or fix the directee (rather than converse in a God-direction). The book's overall focus is on the importance of boundaries and how to erect them. Overall, there are lots of good tips and ideas in the essays, particularly on how to implement things in one's practice. The book ends with two appendices: the first being a set of ethical guidelines from a spirituality center in California, and the second being SDI's own brief ethical rule.