ceptionally clear and accessible; an ideal text for an undergraduate class on chance or the philosophy of physics. At the same time, the book is cutting edge; it critically engages with and contributes to the recent literature on chance. Anyone interested in issues involving chance, whether ignorant of the literature or fully immersed in it, should get a copy of this book. As one would expect in a book on this topic, Handfield presents and critically evaluates some typical realist accounts of chance, and sketches some anti-realist alternatives and the challenges they face. But Handfield also ventures into a number of nearby issues in the philos-ophy of physics. He provides an informative discussion of the picture of the world suggested by c...