There is plenty of advice on offer here on how to treat a house rabbit well, evidently culled from the author's personal experience with house rabbits. However, the text tends to overstate the obvious, going into minute detail about what toys to offer your rabbit, say, yet glossing over some of the more important details when it comes to issues of diet. The healthcare section is similarly oddly weighted. Thus the advice on administering medicines is helpful and explicit but the severity of some dangerous conditions is not stressed enough, suggesting that no suitably qualified vet was consulted about this section, as does the lack of direction towards today's preferred methods of treatment. While there is much in this book of interest to the houserabbit owner, it would be risky to assume that it contains all that one needs to know about keeping houserabbits, as the title implies. People wishing for all-round expertise on keeping houserabbits would fare better with Marinell Harriman's House Rabbit Handbook.