The Adobe Creative Team has made a very good job of teaching the principal skills required to start using InDesign 2.0 productively. It is different from the usual beginners' guides by being completely free of boring anecdotes and waffly sections about how great the software is. Instead, you get 14 big lessons (complete with ALL required tutorial files on CD-ROM), no-nonsense explanations and advice, and a surprisingly comprehensive chapter on colour management across InDesign, Photoshop and Illustrator. My only warning is that in Adobe's hurry to get this publication out quickly after the release of InDesign 2.0 itself, it suffers from a number of errors. I don't mean poor spellings (no complaints here) but fast-checking problems such as references to commands under the wrong menus, incorrectly named dialog windows and so on. It's not a big deal, and only occurs a few times in the entire book, but it may just be enough to stop the beginner dead in his tracks halfway through a lesson. More savvy users will spot the errors immediately and skip over them, but if you're InDesign-savvy, why are you reading this book in the first place?