The material and research presented by the authors were rich and quite insightful. However it is a shame to note that this textbook was INCREDIBLY difficult to read. The chapters written by Dr. Baddeley, although commendable, was poorly suited in comparison to the textbook style writing I've found very readable throughout undergrad. I would frequently find myself frustrated while reading his chapters, as the experience was not too different from rummaging through a conglomeration of research papers clipped together. Not to mention there was plenty of research jargon that was presented without elaboration; indeed, a frustrating experience for students who rely on this text for an intro course. From my experience, better editing could have been done for this textbook (even for the more recent the third edition).
I found frequent typos, mislabeled figures, and difficulty understanding why some key terms had their own definition box, while other equally important terms were only highlighted in italics, without the inclusion of its respective definition box.
Its ironic, that material intended to expand one's understanding of memory has made it so unnecessarily challenging and confusing to encode into ones hippocampal and memory based cortices.