I haven't tried any of these recipes yet, but some look quite good and some look iffy (based on the photos). I really wish they had done better food staging and taken more photos -- there are some photos that look more like stock photos than any of the actual recipes (like, a picture of produce on a stand). There are a few that I do want to try, and many of the recipes have great variety, which I like.
As a cookbook, it's not that great. There aren't many photos, which if you've read any of my other cookbook reviews, you know I love a photo for every recipe, and so this is a knock against the book. The recipes are also not structured well on the page. For instance, there is no easily visible notice of how many servings this recipe makes (it's two, which I found by reading the bottom of the recipe where it says "how to pack" -- "pack into 2 lunchboxes" (not verbatim)); there is no indication of how much time each recipe takes to make (I know they're salads so they don't take long to put together, but there are recipes where you need to roast or cook something and that takes time) and you'd need to read the recipe thoroughly to decide if the time it takes to make fits your schedule; if anyone has any gluten, nut or other allergies, you can only tell by reading the ingredients where some other cookbooks have icons to indicate whether a recipe is gluten-free, vegan, nut-free, grain-free, etc. Essentially, this cookbook isn't the best for someone who likes to have the info at a glance when deciding which recipe to make. The steps themselves are written in a way that is straightforward. I do like that there are recipes for different dressings and that the introduction isn't wordy. I appreciate that there isn't a whole leading paragraph to each recipe and that they just get right in.
I'll update this review if/when I make something(s)!