The book begins with an incredibly rudimentary introduction to KETO, including a few variations of the diet along with some statements most following a KETO diet wouldn't agree with such as "there's no set rule for carb intake", and assumptions including "the ketogenic diet process is successful in approximately 90% of its users", what is this based on? They refer to the Charlie Foundation at the beginning of the book which I respected but neglected to talk about the classic keto programs as defined by the Charlie Foundation, however they touched on SKD, TKD, CKD, and HPKD. Anyway, I'd gotten this for bread recipes, so this wasn't a big deal. The next section was much better with greater explanation and included a decent section about tools needed to prepare the recipes and a good explanation of the processes, how to prepare, and store the bread, and different types of ingredients, sweeteners, and spices used. I liked this part which was explained well and got me very eager to progress into the recipes.I appreciated that this recipe book had so many different recipes but why not a single picture of any of them? I like to know what something should look like when cooked. Printed recipe books I buy have pictures, and there's no reason not to include these in an electronic recipe book. This was very disappointing to me. I'd flipped through each page, hoping some would have pictures, but none did. Most of the recipes in this book break on separate pages but several don't, making for an uncomfortable read. Some items have external links, though strangely it had an external link for basil and not for "Silpat". I know what basil is, but why not say to cook on a silicone baking mat, I have one of those but had to Google Silpat as never heard this term before. I'd appreciated how each recipe pointed out the nutritional content of each recipe and had bullet points for each ingredient proceeding the instructions, but again, where are the pictures? When I read a recipe book, I'm eager for a "that looks good" image inspiring me to cook and what to expect.This book has potential. It needs some cleanup to the formatting on some pages, better explanation of the different types of keto diets as long as that's being included, and most importantly, PICTURES. There are probably some very delicious recipes in here, I just really want to see what they should look like. If anything, it's given me suggestions on recipe names to Google, which results in pictures, along with recipes, almost defeating the purpose of this collection. When publishing a book with a beautiful picture on the cover, please consider including pictures in the book itself, or disclaiming that it won't have any. I'm visually oriented. I think most people are in this information age. Cheers!